Inspire us top 25, post some comments.

Last post 06-09-2008 2:26 AM by Barbara Jones. 538 replies.
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  • 02-20-2008 9:38 PM In reply to

    Re: Inspire us top 25, post some comments.

    Barbara Jones:

    I am sure glad it is not real money. But it does sometimes feel like it.

    Barb,

    How are your "sinking six" doing? I believe RIMM is trying slowly to cimb above $100. If it does, set a tight stop @$ 98.00.

    My stocks did 50/50 as you can see:

     

    February 20, 2008

     

    Shorted SWC and covered!

     

    Real-Time Quotes and Mutual Funds Prices

     

     

     

    Get Detailed Quotes

    Refresh

     

     

    Symbol

    T

    Bid

    Ask

    Last

    Change

    Volume

    FSI

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    NORTEL NETWORK CORP NEW

    4:02:11 PM EST

     

     

    NT US N

    +

    11.30

    11.57

    11.47

    -0.12

    3,077,311

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    WORLD WRESTLING ENTMNT INC

    4:04:18 PM EST

     

     

    WWE US N

    -

    16.77

    17.50

    16.99

    -0.21

    357,900

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    ENTRUST INC

    4:00:02 PM EST

     

     

    ENTU US Q

    -

    2.01

    2.59

    2.51

    -0.01

    782,092

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    CONSOL ENERGY INC

    4:01:49 PM EST

     

     

    CNX US N

    +

    72.88

    78.55

    78.61

    -0.04

    3,261,803

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    MASSEY ENERGY CO

    4:01:12 PM EST

     

     

    MEE US N

    -

    40.41

    41.26

    41.14

    -0.19

    2,172,336

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    PEABODY ENERGY CORP

    4:01:45 PM EST

     

     

    BTU US N

    +

    59.10

    60.35

    59.71

    0.74

    5,018,850

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    POTASH CORP SASK INC

    4:00:46 PM EST

     

     

    POT US N

    +

    156.39

    156.39

    156.00

    3.50

    6,937,163

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    MOSAIC COMPANY (THE)

    4:01:09 PM EST

     

     

    MOS US N

    +

    113.70

    114.50

    114.04

    4.49

    6,381,074

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    AGRIUM INC

    4:01:57 PM EST

     

     

    AGU US N

    -

    70.65

    71.48

    70.42

    2.46

    3,472,890

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    CAMECO CORPORATION

    4:03:14 PM EST

     

     

    CCJ US N

    +

    36.13

    37.15

    37.12

    0.69

    2,785,030

     

     

     

    Happy trading....

     

  • 02-20-2008 10:44 PM In reply to

    Re: Inspire us top 25, post some comments.

    Consider the 130/30  strategy:

     

    130/30 hedge funds are one of the fast growing strategies within the hedge fund industry. 130/30 hedge funds are like normal 100% long managers except they are allowed to short 30% of the value of the portfolio and then use those shorting proceeds to go an additional 30% long in the portfolio. The end results is a overall portfolio position of 130% long and 30% short.

     

    You should take huge risks in this game.

     

    MAGE

  • 02-21-2008 3:26 PM In reply to

    Re: Inspire us top 25, post some comments.

     Don't be afraid to Sell Short.  Look at the top ten.  Those who havecash in their accounts are probably selling short.

     

    MAGE 

  • 02-21-2008 3:38 PM In reply to

    Re: Inspire us top 25, post some comments.

    Luego:

    Barbara Jones:

    I am sure glad it is not real money. But it does sometimes feel like it.

    Barb,

    How are your "sinking six" doing? I believe RIMM is trying slowly to cimb above $100. If it does, set a tight stop @$ 98.00.

    My stocks did 50/50 as you can see:

     

    February 20, 2008

     

    Shorted SWC and covered!

     

    Real-Time Quotes and Mutual Funds Prices

     

     

     

    Get Detailed Quotes

    Refresh

     

     

    Symbol

    T

    Bid

    Ask

    Last

    Change

    Volume

    FSI

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    NORTEL NETWORK CORP NEW

    4:02:11 PM EST

     

     

    NT US N

    +

    11.30

    11.57

    11.47

    -0.12

    3,077,311

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    WORLD WRESTLING ENTMNT INC

    4:04:18 PM EST

     

     

    WWE US N

    -

    16.77

    17.50

    16.99

    -0.21

    357,900

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    ENTRUST INC

    4:00:02 PM EST

     

     

    ENTU US Q

    -

    2.01

    2.59

    2.51

    -0.01

    782,092

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    CONSOL ENERGY INC

    4:01:49 PM EST

     

     

    CNX US N

    +

    72.88

    78.55

    78.61

    -0.04

    3,261,803

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    MASSEY ENERGY CO

    4:01:12 PM EST

     

     

    MEE US N

    -

    40.41

    41.26

    41.14

    -0.19

    2,172,336

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    PEABODY ENERGY CORP

    4:01:45 PM EST

     

     

    BTU US N

    +

    59.10

    60.35

    59.71

    0.74

    5,018,850

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    POTASH CORP SASK INC

    4:00:46 PM EST

     

     

    POT US N

    +

    156.39

    156.39

    156.00

    3.50

    6,937,163

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    MOSAIC COMPANY (THE)

    4:01:09 PM EST

     

     

    MOS US N

    +

    113.70

    114.50

    114.04

    4.49

    6,381,074

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    AGRIUM INC

    4:01:57 PM EST

     

     

    AGU US N

    -

    70.65

    71.48

    70.42

    2.46

    3,472,890

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    CAMECO CORPORATION

    4:03:14 PM EST

     

     

    CCJ US N

    +

    36.13

    37.15

    37.12

    0.69

    2,785,030

     

     

     

    Happy trading....

     

    thanks Luego, I could sell my sinking six now but it would be too much loss to recoup, since this is only a game and the real loss doesn't show until you sell I am just going to hold and if they ever bounce enough then I will sell real darn quick. I have some short trades right now that will hopefully make me some profit. Rimm did not bounce quite enough today and it will go back down so will make a good short trade, but I am still hanging on and will just hope the next bounce will be a little bigger. I have managed so far to get shut of most losers with a few bucks profit by hanging on long enough. It just sometimes takes forever.
  • 02-21-2008 5:25 PM In reply to

    Re: Inspire us top 25, post some comments.

    The market has been brutal - lots of whipsawing.

     

    Sorry I havent posted too much, but I now have the flu... will post when I feel better.

     

    Later........

  • 02-21-2008 5:48 PM In reply to

    Re: Inspire us top 25, post some comments.

    Barbara Jones:

    Luego:

    Barbara Jones:

    I am sure glad it is not real money. But it does sometimes feel like it.

    Barb,

    How are your "sinking six" doing? I believe RIMM is trying slowly to cimb above $100. If it does, set a tight stop @$ 98.00.

    My stocks did 50/50 as you can see:

     

    February 20, 2008

     

    Shorted SWC and covered!

     

    Real-Time Quotes and Mutual Funds Prices

     

     

     

    Get Detailed Quotes

    Refresh

     

     

    Symbol

    T

    Bid

    Ask

    Last

    Change

    Volume

    FSI

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    NORTEL NETWORK CORP NEW

    4:02:11 PM EST

     

     

    NT US N

    +

    11.30

    11.57

    11.47

    -0.12

    3,077,311

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    WORLD WRESTLING ENTMNT INC

    4:04:18 PM EST

     

     

    WWE US N

    -

    16.77

    17.50

    16.99

    -0.21

    357,900

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    ENTRUST INC

    4:00:02 PM EST

     

     

    ENTU US Q

    -

    2.01

    2.59

    2.51

    -0.01

    782,092

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    CONSOL ENERGY INC

    4:01:49 PM EST

     

     

    CNX US N

    +

    72.88

    78.55

    78.61

    -0.04

    3,261,803

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    MASSEY ENERGY CO

    4:01:12 PM EST

     

     

    MEE US N

    -

    40.41

    41.26

    41.14

    -0.19

    2,172,336

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    PEABODY ENERGY CORP

    4:01:45 PM EST

     

     

    BTU US N

    +

    59.10

    60.35

    59.71

    0.74

    5,018,850

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    POTASH CORP SASK INC

    4:00:46 PM EST

     

     

    POT US N

    +

    156.39

    156.39

    156.00

    3.50

    6,937,163

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    MOSAIC COMPANY (THE)

    4:01:09 PM EST

     

     

    MOS US N

    +

    113.70

    114.50

    114.04

    4.49

    6,381,074

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    AGRIUM INC

    4:01:57 PM EST

     

     

    AGU US N

    -

    70.65

    71.48

    70.42

    2.46

    3,472,890

     

     

     

    Buy   Sell  

    CAMECO CORPORATION

    4:03:14 PM EST

     

     

    CCJ US N

    +

    36.13

    37.15

    37.12

    0.69

    2,785,030

     

     

     

    Happy trading....

     

    thanks Luego, I could sell my sinking six now but it would be too much loss to recoup, since this is only a game and the real loss doesn't show until you sell I am just going to hold and if they ever bounce enough then I will sell real darn quick. I have some short trades right now that will hopefully make me some profit. Rimm did not bounce quite enough today and it will go back down so will make a good short trade, but I am still hanging on and will just hope the next bounce will be a little bigger. I have managed so far to get shut of most losers with a few bucks profit by hanging on long enough. It just sometimes takes forever.
     

    Well Barb,

    I'm trying to give you some encouragement, and I'm glad you are finally going with the trend and place some short trades.

    Most my longs are going down as well, and today I bought back SWC and got stopped out on quite a few others:

      Symbol T Bid AskLast Change Volume FSI  
      Buy   Sell   WORLD WRESTLING ENTMNT INC 4:07:49 PM EST  
      WWE US N + 17.00 17.55 17.06 0.07 409,717
     
      Buy   Sell   ENTRUST INC 4:00:01 PM EST  
      ENTU US Q - 2.01 2.65 2.55 0.04 746,303
     
      Buy   Sell   POTASH CORP SASK INC 4:00:23 PM EST  
      POT US N + 156.87 157.10 156.87 0.87 7,192,713
     
      Buy   Sell   AGRIUM INC 4:02:39 PM EST  
      AGU US N + 71.30 71.82 71.02 0.60 4,263,080
     
      Buy   Sell   STILLWATER MINING COMPANY 4:04:01 PM EST  
      SWC US N + 17.75 18.17 18.22 0.83 3,111,170

    Got stopped out on NT, CNX, MEE, BTU and MOS.

    Happy trading.... 

  • 02-21-2008 5:50 PM In reply to

    Re: Inspire us top 25, post some comments.

    victhebrick:

    The market has been brutal - lots of whipsawing.

     

    Sorry I havent posted too much, but I now have the flu... will post when I feel better.

     

    Later........

     

    Vic,

    Have a speedy recovery !

    We need your input! 

    Happy trading.. 

  • 02-21-2008 7:23 PM In reply to

    Re: Inspire us top 25, post some comments.

    Luego:

    victhebrick:

    The market has been brutal - lots of whipsawing.

     

    Sorry I havent posted too much, but I now have the flu... will post when I feel better.

     

    Later........

     

    Vic,

    Have a speedy recovery !

    We need your input! 

    Happy trading.. 

    Same to you Vic

    Hope you get feeling better,,,,I appreciate your post also

  • 02-22-2008 1:55 PM In reply to

    Re: Inspire us top 25, post some comments.

    Brisky and Luego:

    Thanks for the positive energy!!  I should be back on my feet by the weekend.

     

    - Vic

  • 02-22-2008 2:22 PM In reply to

    Re: Inspire us top 25, post some comments.

    Not very stressful where I am, I'm allready looking forward to the next tourny.

    Being just a few hundred from the bottom and a portfolio loaded with Penny stocks, well you get the picture.

    Hope this cheers some of you up.

     

  • 02-22-2008 8:07 PM In reply to

    Re: Inspire us top 25, post some comments.

    Luego:

    victhebrick:

    The market has been brutal - lots of whipsawing.

     

    Sorry I havent posted too much, but I now have the flu... will post when I feel better.

     

    Later........

     

    Vic,

    Have a speedy recovery !

    We need your input! 

    Happy trading.. 

    I agree we do appreciate your input and I hope you feel better real soon, I am finally completely over the flu but it was tough and I was really sick for awhile. Hope you don't feel as bad as I did.
  • 02-25-2008 8:55 PM In reply to

    Re: Inspire us top 25, post some comments.

    SHORT AND HOLD            BUY AND HOLD                 OR JUST WAIT THE CRASH NOW.

    I need to know what you think. This is what I am thinking and I wonder if I am
    wrong. We are just like England now. We have a central bank which is called the
    Fed.owned by private members? Our President is like the Queen. Congress is the CEO'S AND CFO'S. The IRS
    and social security is the money taker. "The U.S. Federal Reserve announced
    Friday it will have an auction." So that means the Federal Reserve is the Loan
    Officer. We the people are the share holders in a 2 tier system where the gov.
    gets 2 votes to our 1/2. Yep I got it now. Is this why Charlie Gasperino
    can't get any transparency? Where does the sec and the attorney general fit into
    all of this?ECH...............The biggest rail road land grab in history and
    more money for bankers. In the past 10 years I have seen a 100% in Property
    Value. You ask if we are headed for a recession or a depression. Depression. No
    more credit and please quietly tell all you know not to do any margin trading. I
    can explain why the comedies and rail and transports are still taking off and
    why Steel is raising prices world wide. Watch the 4 Canadates . All are talking
    about rebuilding Americas infrastructure. What they are not talking about is
    what exactly they will build. They let us think that it is the broken bridges
    will be fixed but it is the super highway from Canada to Mexico.The sub prime
    mess leaked out early but now that it is out the Government is working it to
    keep it propped up until they are ready for the election. Dems or Repub. it
    won't matter. As the stock market crashes we will be running around like
    chickens with our heads cut off. Top that off it will seem even worse than it is
    because we can now short on a down market. Who in the heck allowed. The big
    wales are mostly sitting it out waiting for the blood to flow in the street and
    the volatility of the market says we are not there yet.Look at the fact that
    Paulson, the Fed, country wide,bac of amercia, golden sacks,city, morgan, Lynch
    and president bush, Chaney Carol Rove and congress and some banks have not
    stopped the sub prime and other kinds of funky loans. This is a perfect storm to
    unite the 3 country's into one union. This is unfolding before our very eyes and
    I hope there will be a stop to this because we won't have a Fair and free
    Market. I have seen a large influx of people from Mexico and India and other
    country's. They Have Bucks to spend and 75% of it is cash.This is also why we
    will not close the borders. This is why the chambers of commerce across the
    country are fighting in Court to keep the Borders open.That is why real wages
    are not rising but prices are for the working poor. On the bottom in 4 years my
    pay rose 1.25 and compared to prices it has been 300 % inflation and it is
    really hitting the middle class now. Why do you think bush gave away the
    surpluses. To create this whole mess so they can bail us out and get the super
    highway built to unite the 3 country's. Follow the money. Why still can we not
    get transparency into this whole mess? Where is the new attorney general in
    wading into this whole mess? Is this what you want for your children> Rummer is
    our government did do a back door deal with Mexico to sell them the Helicopters
    and weapons and if my facts are right passed this in the Iraq bill. Look at
    Texas I'm am thinking of Perry and Hutchenson and more also part of this but
    this is all just what I am thinking. Look into the Tex. Congress and you will
    see that our boarder patrol never received any money and was told that we can
    get it from Mexico. Top that off with the War in Afghanistan and Iraq. I am
    letting you know that this will go down just like the Depression when it was
    wages 40 to 1 and now it is 536 to 1 for the working poor. That is why it is
    up-heavel world wide. The wage range is world wide. What will happen next to
    quell the masses is another bigger war.You hear the sabor rattling now with
    Russia and China. Look back to the 1800 and then1900 leading up to the roaring
    20's the great depression and then another world war. Can we see history
    repeating its self? Are we following the European union? Yes and yet didn't this
    country fight to be free and how did the United States loose its way. Now listen
    to the people who are telling us to take on more debt to make this much worse.
    The ones who tell us to save are the ones we need to listen to . Add to that
    bush will turn over some of our country to Russia's sovern wealth funds as well
    as China sovern wealth fund .I hope this helps to explain why comedies are going
    up in this market. Now you have the information and you can do with it what you
    may. Thank you for listening to me. Just one more piece of information for you.
    Estements we will be bankrupt by 2057 If you missed our overtime briefing on
    Friday, David Walker resigned from his position as U.S. comptroller general.
    “As comptroller general of the United States,” says David Walker, the
    federal government’s top accountant, “there are real limitations on what I can
    do and say in connection with key public policy issues, especially issues that
    directly relate to GAO’s client -- the Congress.”
    Walker left his government post to lead the newly founded Peter G. Peterson
    Foundation. As the head of the Peterson Foundation, Walker will oversee the
    billion-dollar endowment of Pete Peterson -- former commerce secretary, the
    founder of the Blackstone Group and the Concord Coalition and legendary advocate
    for government fiscal responsibility. Chief among Walker’s duties at the
    Peterson Foundation will be the funding and advocating of projects that will
    enhance public awareness of fiscal imbalance, government deficits and nuclear
    proliferation.

    We’re hoping that I.O.U.S.A., in which Walker plays a distinct and prominent
    role, will be one of those projects. We’ll keep you updated either way. For the
    full story, check out the “overtime briefing” we sent on Friday. also Bush ends
    Africa tour focused on successful partnership
    One group of Bankers outing another group of Bankers just like in the 1900? One starts rumors and we follow up on it? Which Bank become the winner and makes more money?This artical is from 2005 and now
    in 2008 how much worse is it? Subitute
    luminaries,
    and free masons for bankers> Who is making the money?

    GLOBAL REAL ESTATE MARKETS FORUM
    * Realty Reality *
    Editorial

    REALTY REALITY FSO ARCHIVES

    The Invisible Hand
    (of the U.S. Government)
    in Financial Markets
    by Robert Bell
    April 3, 2005

    Summary: The U.S. government is manipulating all major U.S. financial
    markets—stocks, treasuries, currencies. This article shows how it is possible
    and how it is done, why it is done, who specifically is doing it, when they do
    it, and where they get the money to do it.

    Most people probably believe that the major capital markets in the U.S. are
    basically true markets with, occasionally, maybe very occasionally, a little bit
    of rigging here and there. But evidence shows that the opposite is the case—the
    rigging is fundamental with a little bit of true markets here and there. I have
    discussed how this works concerning U.S. and some other stock markets in an
    earlier article.[1] Here I will primarily discuss the rigging of currency and
    U.S. Treasury markets.

    Perhaps the main reason for the urban legend that major markets are not
    generally rigged is that they are assumed to be too big; the millions of
    independent buyers and sellers, worldwide because of globalization, make
    effective and sustained coordination impossible. The implicit assumption is that
    any market could be systematically rigged if it were small enough, or at least
    small enough at some critical choke point.

    Little Markets

    In the case of the market for U.S. Treasuries, the Financial Times summed up
    exactly how small it really is in two major stories, one just under the masthead
    on page one, on 24 January 2005. One story began, “During the past few years the
    US has become dependent, not so much on millions of investors around the globe
    but on a few individuals in a few of the world’s central banks.”[2] In 2003
    these central bankers bought enough treasuries to cover 83% of the U.S. current
    account deficit, and 86% of those purchases came from Asian central banks.

    The two main sources of money for U.S. Treasuries are the central banks of Japan
    and China. Japan held about $715 billion in U.S. Treasuries, as of November
    2004, and China held about $191 billion.[3] All the other nations’ central banks
    hold altogether, about the same amount again, roughly another trillion.

    As the total of all obligations is about $4 trillion, two central banks
    obviously hold about one quarter of the total. They are in the position to pump
    or dump the Treasury market all by themselves. They can sell what they have or
    simply stop buying when the Treasury sells.

    Since the money comes from a handful of foreign central banks, the possible
    rigging of the Treasury market equals the possible rigging of the foreign
    exchange markets. These central banks have to buy dollars before they buy
    Treasuries. Even Alan Greenspan has acknowledged that the two go together,
    admitting that Asian central banks “may be supporting the dollar and U.S.
    Treasury prices somewhat.”[4]

    U.S. stock markets are also capable of being systematically rigged, and for the
    same reason—a handful of players can dominate if they coordinate their actions.
    The key choke point is in the number of mutual funds, which themselves hold
    about 20% of all the stock in the major markets. Of the over 8000 all-stock
    mutual funds, a mere 497 hold roughly three-fourths of the stock. This is easily
    a small enough number to pump the market, whether through coordinated buying
    disguised as programmed trading, or simply a follow-the-leader mechanism. All
    the other thousands of funds and the millions of individuals around the globe
    putting their money into these markets can do little more than follow the
    momentum. No major U.S. stock market writer, advisor or player seems to publicly
    acknowledge this, as far as I know. But the CEO (PDG) of the French insurance
    giant AXA has acknowledged it: Claude Bebear wrote in his 2003 book Ils vont
    tuer le capitalisme (They are going to kill capitalism):

    “… today, shareholders are relegated to the role of quasi-spectators. The small
    shareholders that are now called ‘individual investors’ know that they have
    little weight. All together, they only represent a small percent of capital
    because the investments of households are more and more in the form of mutual
    funds, pension funds (fonds communs de placement) or life insurance funds. The
    shareholders today are thus the institutional investors.”[i] [5]

    Bebear, in charge of one of the world’s biggest stock portfolios, adds:

    “We are no more, in effect, in a world that one reads in the economic text
    books, with innumerable investors of various characterizations, choosing each in
    his own way the stocks that he’ll put in his portfolio; the results of their
    millions of decisions generating a sort of changing market equilibrium, but a
    stable one. The truth is that for several years, the reasoned investment on a
    stock has almost disappeared in favor of more and more mechanical behavior.”[ii]
    [6]
    Plunge Protection

    Programmed trading in an utterly concentrated stock market pretty much
    guarantees the possibility of systematic and continual market rigging. But to
    accomplish this, and coordinate it with the currency and Treasury markets, some
    sort of orchestrating mechanism would need to exist. It does; it is known as the
    President’s Working Group on Financial Markets, occasionally referred to in the
    business press as the Plunge Protection Team. Then President Ronald Reagan
    signed it into existence on 18 March 1988, with the specific intension to avoid
    another stock market crash such as that of 19 October 1987. The Working Group’s
    existence is no mystery. See for yourself. Go to Google and type in Executive
    Order 12631. You will find the Executive Order, and even a 14 November 2003
    statement from Secretary of the Treasury John Snow giving a brief history of the
    Working Group, describing its policy advisory activities, and concluding with
    these words: “It also is a forum used to exchange information during market
    turmoil through ad hoc conference calls and meetings.”

    Presumably Plunge Protection doesn’t hold these ad hoc conference calls and
    meetings just to be passive bystanders. Executive Order 12631 specifically
    authorizes them to coordinate buying: “The Working Group shall consult, as
    appropriate, with representatives of the various exchanges, clearinghouses,
    self-regulatory bodies, and with major market participants to determine private
    sector solutions wherever possible.”

    So not only is the fix in, it is legal.

    In a 1989 Wall Street Journal article, then Federal Reserve board member Robert
    Heller even suggested a market intervention strategy: “Instead of flooding the
    entire economy with liquidity, and thereby increasing the danger of inflation,
    the Fed could support the stock market directly by buying market averages in the
    futures market, thus stabilizing the market as a whole.”

    Guess Whose Money is Used to Buy Stock Market Insurance?

    There is even a potentially unlimited source of money to do this pumping.
    Federal government contractors operate under a special law, CAS, in their
    defined benefits pension plans. This gives them stock portfolio insurance,
    something which small fry players would obviously like to get, but can’t find
    anyone willing to issue. Should the pension funds of the federal government
    contractors lose money in their investments to the degree that they fall below
    minimum reserve requirements imposed by other federal laws, they can simply make
    up the difference by adding it on pro-rata to subsequent items sold to the
    federal government. The vast sums of federal tax money devoted to plugging the
    holes in the pension fund for the largest Pentagon contractor, Lockheed Martin,
    were discovered by Ken Pedeleose, an analyst at the Defense Contract Management
    Agency. He was concerned about staggering cost increases for the C-130J
    transport but a chart he made public showed the mind boggling per plane cost
    increases for a number of Lockheed Martin airplanes. The chart amounted to a
    Rosetta Stone for the military-industrial complex. It showed, essentially, how
    the military-industrial complex linked to the stock market through the Lockheed
    Martin pension fund, and by extension through all the others covered by the same
    law.

    Is there a corresponding source of tax money to pump the currency and Treasury
    markets? There is an official one for currency, the Exchange Stabilization
    Fund. It was established in 1934 to prop up the dollar in foreign exchange
    markets. But it can be used for any purpose determined by the Secretary of the
    Treasury. In mid-1995, the fund contained $42 billion.[iii] The actual amount
    varies depending on how well the Treasury does on its currency transactions. The
    money originally came from the sale of U.S. government gold, but the Treasury
    kept the money as a private fund, not under Congressional control. Since it is a
    finite amount of money, not appropriated by Congress, it probably is not often
    used to pump the stock market or even the market for Treasuries.

    The markets for Treasuries, and also currency, are being pumped using the tax
    code and pension fund laws. But to understand this we have to first look at why
    pumping might be necessary.

    Treasuries Exchanged for Jobs

    The U.S. Treasury holdings of Japan and China are essentially a consequence of a
    trade imbalance between the U.S. and these two countries, with the balance
    heavily tilted to the latter. To maintain the imbalance, which they both clearly
    want to do, both countries must keep their currency pegged against the dollar at
    a lower rate than it might otherwise be. If they did not do that, the Toshiba
    computers, Toyota cars and other quality items made in Japan would be more
    expensive, and so Japan wouldn’t sell as many of them in the U.S. A similar case
    holds for vast numbers of Chinese manufactured items sold pretty much
    everywhere, but notoriously at Wal-Mart. To keep the items relatively cheap,
    the central banks of those countries keep their currencies cheap by buying a
    corresponding amount of dollars, thus supporting the dollar against their
    currencies. The dollar may essentially collapse against the euro, but not
    against the yen and the yuan.

    With the dollars the Japanese and Chinese central banks have bought, they can
    buy something denominated in U.S. dollars; the item of choice is U.S. Treasuries
    since it is like holding dollars that pay interest. So this has the effect of
    pumping the price of Treasuries too. Because the items made in China and Japan
    are cheaper than those of corresponding quality made in the U.S. (in the case of
    many Japanese items, there may not be U.S. items of similar quality), the effect
    is to create manufacturing jobs in those countries while simultaneously losing
    them in the U.S. In effect the jobs are exported and foreign currency is
    imported to buy dollars and then Treasuries.

    This has an advantage for the Bush administration, which has the ruinously
    ridiculous policies of simultaneously cutting taxes and waging wars or building
    up for them. In effect, the basic racket is: the Bush administration exports
    jobs to these countries, and in turn they finance Bush’s fiscal deficit so he
    can continue his wars and cut taxes for his friends. The deficit for 2005 will
    be at least $400 billion, according to the Congressional Budget Office.[7] The
    Pentagon budget for 2005 was about $400 billion. Add in two supplemental
    requests for the costs of his Iraq war and the Pentagon figure is roughly $500
    billion. “It is interesting to note that the military budget is about the same
    order of magnitude as the fiscal deficit,” said veteran Pentagon waste fighter
    Ernest Fitzgerald.

    The tax cuts were at least in part intended to stimulate spending—the purchase
    of all those Toshibas, Toyotas and Chinese whatnots. So the fiscal deficit is
    intimately linked to the current account deficit. If the money had been taxed
    away to pay for Bush’s current war and arms build-up for future ones, it would
    not be in people’s pockets to pay even for the down payments on the Toyotas.

    But won’t the Japanese and Chinese central banks ultimately get burned by
    holding vast quantities of dollar denominated assets? Sure, if the dollar ever
    collapses against their currencies too. The dollar having fallen roughly 30%
    against the euro since the beginning of the war in Iraq, the same fate or worse
    could await these Asian currencies. With currently issued Treasuries paying a
    coupon rate of no more than 4%, they would be materially shafted on their
    investments in U.S. Treasuries. Then why don’t they bail out?
    The Emperors’ Revenge

    For the Chinese, the basic racket is too delicious and too ironical. They
    industrialize their country at the expense of the de-industrialization of the
    U.S. Not only is it sweet revenge for more than a hundred years of humiliation
    at the hands of Europeans and Americans, but also at the end they are relatively
    strong and the U.S. is relatively not. What do they care if the deal isn’t quite
    as good as it would be in a perfect world and they lose a third, half,
    two-thirds of their savings in U.S. Treasuries? Besides, in an even mildly less
    imperfect world, the U.S. President would not make such a blatantly corrupt
    bargain against the people of the U.S. Billionaire investor Warren Buffett calls
    this system of indebting U.S. citizens to foreign governments “a sharecropper’s
    society,” to distinguish it from Bush’s supposed “ownership society.”

    No wonder Chinese central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan told a press interviewer
    at the time of the G-7 session in London in early February, “now is not the
    time” to revalue his currency, the yuan.[8] Of course it is not. He is clearly
    not stupid. The time to revalue is after China has sucked all the remaining jobs
    out of the U.S. that it can or just before the U.S. gets a less dishonest
    government. For the Japanese, the basic sweetness of the deal plus geopolitical
    strategic reasons may keep them tied to the U.S. There is also the spirit of J.
    Paul Getty’s famous line: “If you owe the bank $100 that's your problem. If you
    owe the bank $100 million, that's the bank's problem.” Some Japanese clearly
    think they have a problem. Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi said on 11 March
    2005 concerning his government’s U.S. dollar holdings, “I believe
    diversification is necessary.” This instantly shook the currency markets,
    causing the director of the Japanese finance ministry’s foreign exchange
    division, Mastatsugu Asakawa, to blurt out, “We have never thought about
    currency diversification.”[9]

    Mr. Asakawa has been kept busy making this point. On 23 February 2005 he had
    already stated, “We have no plans to change the composition of currency holdings
    in the foreign reserves and we are not thinking about expanding our euro
    holdings.”[10] He added, “Valuation loss is not our primary concern. My opinion
    is that I don’t have to care seriously about that.”[11]

    There are, of course, other major single party buyers of dollars and Treasuries
    besides the central banks of Japan and China. In fact Mr. Asakawa’s earlier
    remark was precipitated by a market panicking statement on 22 February from the
    Bank of Korea. They indicated they were considering diversifying some of their
    $200 billion in currency reserves, 70% of which were in dollars. The dollar
    plunged 1.2% against both the yen and the euro. Part of this was due to
    programmed trading which kicked in with sell orders after the dollar hit a
    threshold of $1.3210 to the euro.[12] After the dollar suddenly fell, South
    Korean officials quickly announced they wouldn’t sell any of their existing
    dollar reserves, leaving open the possibility of putting new reserves into other
    currencies.

    South Korea, presumably, can be muscled. Other central banks are less
    susceptible to pressure. On 5 February 2005 Russia announced that it would no
    longer peg the ruble to the dollar, but instead to a shifting weighting of
    dollars and euros. Russia had been selling dollars and buying euros since
    October 2004, during which time the U.S. dollar had tumbled significantly
    against the euro.[13] This of course corresponded to the period when Bush was
    seen to be back in power for another four years.

    The overwhelming consensus of financial writers was that both the dollar and
    Treasuries would really hit the skids in the new year, 2005. The consensus was
    global. For example, the French financial paper, Les Echos wrote in its edition
    of 21-22 January: “Until now, it was a question of the great bet adopted nearly
    unanimously by foreign exchange traders—the dollar will fall in 2005.”[14]

    Of course, as implied by the quote, the dollar did not fall. Nor, of course, did
    its fat twin, U.S. Treasuries, which are little more than interest paying
    dollars. Is this because the trade deficit improved? Not really, although it
    showed a slight gain in early February, long after the dollar and Treasuries had
    materially improved. The dollar had gone up 3.6% from 1 January 2005 until 22
    February 2005. Why? Did Bush raise taxes, thereby erasing some of the fiscal
    deficit? Not at all. On the contrary, he cut taxes—as usual for a select
    group—and that’s why the dollar rebounded.
    Plunge Protection’s New Cash

    In late October 2004, the U.S. public was looking the other way when the tax cut
    was passed. Most people were obsessing over who would win the presidential
    election. Few were paying much attention to what the Republicans in Congress
    were doing, which was giving billions in tax cuts to U.S. corporations which had
    profits parked in tax havens around the world, such as in Ireland or Singapore.
    Bush signed the law enabling this tax giveaway on 22 October 2004. The tax
    changes were noted by a few at the time, even before the law changed. But the
    general level of financial journalism is so bad that they got no real echo in
    the press. Most people speculating against the dollar had no idea they were
    about to get stung. Obviously a few knew what the implications of the tax law
    were. They made out, more or less literally, like bandits. But one cannot
    legitimately claim insider trading since the tax law changes were publicly
    available knowledge, and even made it to the internet on various accountant
    websites in October. But they don’t seem to have gone much beyond these
    specialists. On 15 January 2005, I had a long talk in Paris with a top European
    stock market guru. Well connected and with a devoted following which he
    obviously did not want to burn, he had in all sincerity advocated buying gold to
    a gathering of thousands of his devotees a couple of months earlier, in
    November, after the passage of the U.S. tax law.

    Most speculators were caught unaware on this source of currency pumping money,
    so it is unreasonable to assume that there will not be other surprises, which
    will be announced in due course.

    The law Bush signed in late October 2004 goes by the obscenely false name, the
    American Jobs Creation Act. If there is one thing it will not do is to create
    jobs. It will instead create takeovers, which nearly always produce losses in
    jobs—in the name of synergy. Takeovers are on the limited menu of activities
    companies are permitted to do with the money they can “repatriate” under this
    law. Not that the limited menu makes much difference, since the money brought in
    does not have to be fenced off in any way. So if $10 billion were spent by a
    company on takeovers, that frees up another $10 billion to do whatever was
    prohibited under the law, such as paying dividends, buying back stock, or
    filling the pockets of executives with extra bonuses. Normally such profits
    earned in foreign subsidiaries of U.S. companies would be subject to a tax rate
    of 35% if they were brought home, which is why the money had stayed parked in
    the tax havens. But the law gives companies a one-year window for the
    “repatriation” of this cash at a tax rate of only 5.25%. Nobody knows how much
    will be brought in. When the law was passed in October, the general expectation
    reportedly was that the figure would be about $135 billion.[15] But one player
    has estimated it at $319 billion. “This has some investment bankers salivating,”
    wrote David Wells in the Financial Times.[16] But how much would be converted
    into dollars from other currencies? According to two different investment banks,
    the figure is somewhere around $100 billion.[17] That would be the minimum
    available from this source to pump the dollar for one year. Recall that the
    Exchange Stabilization Fund has less than half that for eternity.

    The Bush administration’s use of repatriated foreign profits to pump domestic
    markets shows that they are not going to let “thin ice” signs stifle their
    version of the economy, at least not without a fight. However, the underlying
    weakness of the economy because of the twin deficits remains, so basically all
    that Bush and his Plunge Protection team are doing is moving the “thin ice” sign
    out onto thinner and thinner ice. The weight of the Bush team will eventually
    crash through that ice into exceedingly cold water.

    But what about those drooling investment bankers? They will claim that this
    harvested money used in takeovers will eventually produce U.S. jobs, despite
    initial job losses due to the takeovers themselves. Investment bankers, who
    engineer many if not most takeovers, nearly always argue that the takeovers
    ultimately create jobs in the long term. The investment banks themselves,
    however, nearly always insist on being paid substantially in the short term
    through the transaction fees. Their employees, the investment bankers, are also
    substantially paid short term through annual salaries and bonuses. They get paid
    now; others can wait for the long term.

    Panic Buying

    One short-term thing the money has already done is to pump the dollar. The
    mechanism by which this is accomplished is quite simple and is signature Plunge
    Protection. It is the device of the short covering rally. This is what happens
    when speculators sell an asset—stocks, Treasuries or dollars—short. With stocks,
    this means that they sell the asset without actually owning it. They borrow the
    shares they sell, betting the stock will fall. They then buy it at the reduced
    price and return those shares. Another way to accomplish essentially the same
    thing is through options. The risk in a short sale is that the stock will not go
    down but instead go up. The short seller literally is exposed to unlimited
    losses in this case. This is the basis for a short covering rally. Non-shorters
    buy in sufficient volume to force up the price. The price rise scares the
    shorters into buying right away before the price goes too high and they lose too
    much. This results in panic buying as large numbers of short sellers feel
    compelled to buy to limit their losses. Often when the stock market suddenly
    blasts up out of a long slide for little or no reason, we are watching a short
    covering rally. There have been several such rallies in the currency and
    Treasuries markets so far this year, and there will probably be quite a few
    more.

    According to a J.P. Morgan survey, the year 2005 began with most U.S. and
    international speculators holding short positions on U.S. bond markets.[18]
    Obviously this is because they had foolishly looked at the underlying economic
    reality, and failed to understand the profound import of the American Jobs
    Creation Act. Most people were utterly unaware of it until at least January 13,
    when the U.S. Treasury, under whose direction the Plunge Protection team works,
    announced the specifics of what the grand skim could and could not be spent on.
    As noted, the list included stock market pumpers—takeovers.

    The $100 billion (minimum) that will be brought in is not petty cash. One
    currency strategist at ABN Amro, Greg Anderson, has been quoted as saying, “The
    U.S. trade deficit is probably $600 billion in 2005, so this flow will be
    financing a sixth of the deficit all by itself.”[19] Thus this amount is clearly
    enough to have some impact on currency markets, especially if used to trigger
    short covering rallies.

    Whatever is the actual amount that is brought in, it is exceedingly unlikely to
    be all brought in at about the same time. The companies have full discretion as
    to when to bring it in, and Plunge Protection is there to make sure they don’t
    do it at the wrong time. Various of the “ad hoc conference calls” referred to
    above by Secretary Snow could include fund managers and Chief Financial Officers
    of companies with chunks of cash lined up to bring in. Would this incestuous
    network of essentially insider traders be legal? It would be very difficult to
    prosecute without impeaching the President himself. As cited above, Section 2b
    of Executive Order 12631 states: “The Working Group shall consult, as
    appropriate, … with major market participants to determine private sector
    solutions wherever possible. (emphasis added)” Obviously a major currency plunge
    is exactly what Plunge Protection is charged with avoiding.

    The major market participants involved in these money pumping rackets would not
    only be making money, but would view each other as true patriots. They would
    simultaneously serve themselves and serve the national interest. And, if the
    story ever got out, they would be unlikely to serve any time. They would also
    get the reputation for being currency-timing geniuses. Each time they brought in
    cash from euros or pounds, the foreign currency subsequently fell. Their timing
    would appear impeccable. Never mind that they and some government officials are
    creating the timing.

    How big are these chunks of cash? Johnson & Johnson announced in February that
    they would bring in $11 billion.[20] Pfizer put its planned figure at $37.6
    billion.[21] But are these figures big enough to pump the dollar? You bet. An
    ABN Amro currency strategist, Aziz McMahon, has been quoted as saying, “The sums
    are so large that if even a small proportion is transferred from other
    currencies, the positive impact on the dollar could be substantial.” According
    to that bank’s calculations, each $20 billion pumped in from other currencies
    pumps the dollar against a broad index of currencies about 1%.[22] So the
    announced amounts would be sufficient to trigger both momentum trading in the
    dollar and trigger short covering rallies which themselves would trigger further
    momentum trading.

    Even the announcements of the currency repatriations can trigger short covering
    rallies. ABN’s McMahon added, “The psychological impact a wave of announcements
    could have on structural short-dollar positions should also not be
    underestimated.”[23]

    Just Printing Money to Pump Markets

    Short covering rallies certainly played a role in the prolonged stock market run
    up which followed an initial Iraqi War bombing rally in March 2003. But there is
    more. A respected gold market analyst, Michael Bolser, has shown how the Fed
    quite simply pumped money into the markets during this period, with massive cash
    injections often timed at local stock market bottoms. His article, “Repurchase
    agreements and the Dow,” should be required reading for anyone who wants to
    understand rigged markets.[24] According to Bolser’s analysis, the Fed was
    simply flooding the economy with liquidity just before and during that rally.
    Using data available on the Fed website, Bolser plotted the injections of cash
    from the Fed when it bought Treasuries on the open market, which means buying
    them from the 22 banks that deal directly with the Fed. The simple buying of
    existing Treasuries by the Fed is called a “Permanent Open Market Operation”
    (POMO). By contrast, buying back a certificate with a specific repurchase
    (buy-back) date is called a “Temporary Open Market Operation” (TOMO). Bolser
    observes, “There were four closely spaced Permanent Open Market Operations just
    prior to the 1,000-point mid-March DOW launch. In addition, there was another
    POMO on March 13th of $710 Million coupled with a net TOMO injection of $3.25
    Billion which resulted in a 303 point DOW gain on that day.”

    Bolser also clarifies the relative market impacts of these cash injections:
    “Permanent Open Market Operations [POMOs] are usually much smaller in magnitude
    than Temporary operations but have a far greater effect on the market. Experts
    have suggested that there is a nine times market multiplier effect inherent in
    permanent open market operations.”
    Stuffing Wads of Treasuries into Pension Fund Holes

    But what about all those billions that are already parked in dollar denominated
    tax havens, such as Puerto Rico? Among the Treasury Department permitted uses
    of the repatriated cash, is benefit plans, including pension benefits. Most of
    these plans are nowhere near recovery from losses suffered during the late
    1990’s bubble. Normally, the repatriated money would go straight into the stock
    market, thus pumping it--except for one thing. A number of companies do not
    have sufficient money in the reserves of their defined benefits pension funds to
    meet their contractual obligations to their retirees. If a pension fund goes
    broke, a federal agency, the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) takes
    on some of the obligations—typically pensioners collect 25 cents on the dollar.
    But the PBGC is itself broke, with companies defaulting or threatening to do so.
    For example, the PBGC has moved to take over the defined benefits pension funds
    of United Airlines.[25] And this is probably just the start of many such
    takeovers. By November 2004, the plans PBGC insured were under-funded $450
    billion, an increase of $100 billion in just one year. Companies whose debt was
    evaluated at less than investment grade (a group that could soon include General
    Motors) were under-funded by $96 billion, an increase of $12 billion from the
    previous year.

    So the PBGC could require another gigantic federal bailout, “Some have compared
    this to the savings and loan crisis of the early nineties,” said James Moore,
    who is in charge of pension products at a major bond fund, Pimco.[26]

    But the U.S. government is also broke—because of Bush’s pro-war, anti-tax policy
    combination. Are there solutions? Sort of. One is just to fake the numbers,
    reducing the required reserves in these pension funds. Bush also plans to change
    the rules for investing for defined benefits pension plans in a way to reduce
    their likelihood of defaulting. Stocks can be down when pension payout demands
    are up. The right kind of bond could deliver the money at the right time. The
    new rules have not yet been announced, but seem certain to encourage the buying
    of Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS) by the depleted pension funds.
    Some funds are already jumping in to avoid even higher prices later. With the
    long dated TIPS pumped, the dollar looks less unattractive to Chinese and
    Japanese central banks and others. Masayuki Yoshihara, who manages, with others,
    over $9 billion at Japan’s fourth biggest life insurance company, Sumitomo Life
    Insurance Company, said “Pension funds will continue to be overweight the
    long-end of the curve. We expect the yield curve to flatten even more,” [27]
    What? Translating from finance-ese, he says that pension funds will keep buying
    long dated Treasuries, which will pump up their price and thus reduce their
    effective interest yield. (The interest is fixed, literally printed on the bond.
    So if buyers pay more to get the same printed interest rate, their effective
    yield goes down.) With long term interest rates falling and short term ones
    rising, the graph which represents these rates is becoming more and more of a
    flat straight line.

    So there are a lot of relatively new sources of money for official manipulation
    of markets: federal contractor pension fund money, nicely insured under CAS;
    POMO and TOMO money, freshly printed by the Fed; the American Jobs Creation Act
    money, conveniently parked off shore; trading “partner” money, sometimes
    willingly given, sometimes extorted.

    One nice thing about rigged markets is that they permit updating trite stock
    market axioms, such as “Buy on the rumor, sell on the news.” For Treasuries,
    this has now become, “Buy on the rumor, buy again on the news, and then sell it
    to the Chinese or Japanese central banks.”

    All who imagine that the mythical market forces will prevail seem to
    deliberately avoid actually looking at what the so called markets really are,
    including their concentrations, Plunge Protection mechanisms, and Plunge
    Protection’s extensive access to a variety of pools of other people’s money.
    The mechanisms and the market concentrations permit the Bush administration to
    systematically sell off U.S. assets to pay for its more wars/less taxes
    policies. The Bush administration is comparable to a group of corrupt trustees
    for the family fortune of a lazy and incompetent heir. They siphon the money out
    by selling off the inheritance while the heir is too stupid or drunk to notice.
    He still has his mansion, his fleet of big cars and his monthly check, and he
    doesn’t notice that the assets are shrinking. He may not for a while. This
    family’s fortune is big and there are a lot of assets still to sell off.

    © 2005 Robert Bell

    Robert Bell, Chairman of the Economics Department, Brooklyn College, N.Y., is
    the author of seven books, including: Beursbedrog (The Stock Market Sting), De
    Arbeiderspers, Amsterdam, 2003; Les peches capitaux de la haute technologie (The
    Capital Sins of High Technology), Seuil, Paris, 1998; Impure Science, Wiley,
    N.Y., 1992

    REFERENCES

    [1] See “The U.S. Government’s Bubble Blowing Machine.”
    [2] “U.S. Dollar Becomes Dependent on Handful of Central Banks,” Financial
    Times, 24 January 2005, p. 2
    [3] “Treasuries Drop Before U.S. Begins Auctioning $51 Billion of Debt,”
    Bloomberg.com, 8 February 2005
    [4] “U.S. 10-Year Treasury Note Rises on Optimism For Tame Inflation,”
    Bloomberg.com, 7 February 2005
    [5] “…aujourd’***, les actionnaires sont cantonnes das un role de
    quasi-spectateur. Les petits actionnaires – que l’on appelle aujourd’*** <<
    actionnaires individuals >> savent qu’ils ont peu de poids. Tous ensemble, ils
    ne representent que quelques pour cent du capital car l’investissement des
    ménages est de plus en plus sous forme de Sicav, de fonds communs de placement
    ou d’assurance vie. Les acctionnaires, aujourd’***, ce swont donc les
    investisseurs institutionnels.” (p. 187)
    [6] “Nous ne sommes plus, en effet, dans le monde que l’on decrit dans les
    manuels d’economie, avec des investisseurs innombrables aux determinismes
    varies, choisissant chacun a sa maniere les titres qu’il va mettre en
    portefeuille – la resultante de leurs millions de decisions generant une sorte
    d’equilibre de marche changeant, mais stable ! La verite, c’est que, depuis
    quelques annees, l’investissement raisonne sur une valeur a presque disparue au
    profit de comportements de plus en plus mecaniques.” (p. 122)
    [7] “$1.3 trillion deficits forecast over decade,” latimes.com 25 January 2005
    [8] “Dollar Rises Versus Yen; Chin’s Zhou Says Yuan Not Undervalued,”
    Bloomberg.com 7 February 2005.
    [9] “Koizumi puts markets in spin,” Financial Times, 11 March 2005, p. 1
    [10] “Feisty Greenback Inches Ahead,” Financial times, 24 February 2005, p. 30
    [11] “Central Banks Seek to Calm Dollar Fears,” Financial Times 24 February
    2005, p.7
    [12] “Dollar Has Weekly Decline on Concern Banks May Slow Purchases,”
    Bloomberg.com 26 Feb 2005
    [13] “Russia Ends De Facto Dollar Peg and Moves to Align Ruble With Euro,”
    Financial Times, 6 Feb 2005
    [14] “Jusqu’a present, il s’agisait du grand pari adopte par la quasi unanimite
    des cambistes: le dollar baissera en 2005.”
    [15] “U.S. Tax Amnesty Could Rake in $100 Billion,” Financial Times, 31 January
    2005, p. 17
    [16] “Repatriated Cash Raises M&A Hopes,” Financial Times, 31 January 2005
    [17] “U.S. Tax Amnesty Could Rake in $100 Billion,” Financial Times 31 January
    2005, p. 17
    [18] Andrew Coggan, “The Short View,” Financial Times 12 February 2005, p. 15
    [19] “U.S. Tax Amnesty Could Rake in $100 Billion,” Financial Times 31 January
    2005, p. 17
    [20] “Repatriated Cash Raises M&A Hopes,” Financial Times 2005
    [21] “U.S. Tax Amnesty Could Rake in $100 Billion,” Financial Times, 31 January
    2005, p. 17
    [22] “Positive Signs For Dollar Emerge,” Financial Times, 21 January 2005, p.
    28
    [23] “Positive Signs For Dollar Emerge,” Financial Times, 21 January 2005, p.
    28
    [24] http://financialsense.com/editorials/bolser/2003/0602.htm
    [25] “Battle over United pension plans heats up,” Financial Times, 12-13 March
    2005, p. 8
    [26] “A Case of Pension Deficit Disorder,” Financial Times, 24 February 2005, p.
    31
    [27] “Treasuries May Fall Amid Concern Demand Will Fall At Auctions,”
    Bloomberg.com, 9 February 2005
    [i] Claude Bebear, Ils vont tuer le capitalism, Plon, Paris 2003, p. 186
    [ii] Claude Bebear, Ils vont tuer le capitalism, Plon, Paris 2003, p. 122
    (translated from the French by R. Bell)
    [iii] “The Exchange Stabilization Fund: How It Works,” Economic Commentary,
    Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, December 1999 The people of the World want to
    get along. The bankers want power and money. What are we to do and how do we fix
    this? I am trying to follow the money and I need your help.Like I said this is just what I am thinking and I really don't know if
    this is true that is why I am asking you.I am not smart and I need some one to help me.
    Filed under: ,
  • 02-26-2008 11:18 AM In reply to

    Re: Inspire us top 25, post some comments.

    Wow that is a long post.

     

    So after reading that whole thing, you are saying you think the same thing as the author but are asking for our help?

     

    What help do you want?

  • 02-27-2008 10:26 PM In reply to

    Re: Inspire us top 25, post some comments.

    Anyone want to jump in here, or shall we change the subject?

     

    I shorted some RYL today.

  • 02-28-2008 12:29 AM In reply to

    Re: Inspire us top 25, post some comments.

    Sorry Iquadland 10 I do agree with some of it but some of it is over my head and I am not able to form an opinion. I do believe that we are most definitely in a recession and that there is a possibility of a depression. My thoughts on this are just from what I see in the depressed area of Texas that I live where people are finding it more and more difficult to meet living expenses, keep their homes, vehicles and business if they have one. Those that have jobs no longer feel they have any job security regardless of their positions or length of employment.

  • 02-28-2008 12:36 AM In reply to

    Re: Inspire us top 25, post some comments.

    victhebrick:

    Anyone want to jump in here, or shall we change the subject?

     

    I shorted some RYL today.

    I shorted PLCN last week and covered today, I may turn around and short it again but I am not sure yet. I have several other short trades I am holding. I will cover one tomorrow looks like for a nice profit. I am so far really liking short trades, and I think it is a little funny how scared I used to be of this. I expect to lose money on some and it will not bother me because so far I have made dozens of short trades and have not lost money on any of them, and I know you can't always come out the winner when it comes to the market. But I am winning so far with all short trades and have lost with most long positions.
  • 02-28-2008 12:40 AM In reply to

    Re: Inspire us top 25, post some comments.

    Luego I appreciate your earlier post and your encouragement, that is something I am always very happy to receive and you give some very useful and knowledgeable info. Please keep it coming. With all the help I have received from VIC , you, and all the others someday I may actually have a portfolio that will show a profit instead of a loss. I hope.

  • 02-28-2008 12:47 AM In reply to

    Re: Inspire us top 25, post some comments.

    wow that was the longest post yet , dont have time to read the whole thing . hi , barb , just checking to see if any of the top 25 have some more good ideals for me . have to check back later when I have more time .
  • 02-29-2008 3:43 AM In reply to

    Re: Inspire us top 25, post some comments.

    OK, covered the RYL

  • 02-29-2008 3:44 PM In reply to

    Re: Inspire us top 25, post some comments.

    Is that the key....take profits and don't hang in there?
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