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- significant stock market problems re-emerge at end of October 2009 (from 25th onwards)
Market Crash on 9/30/10? (www.StealthStocksOnline.com)
Technical indicators suggest market collapse may begin by Sept 30th
Speculation on non-traditional Fed activity is not a vain exercise.
Bernanke's speech last week gave warning of major initiatives to come.
"
He also showed just how strongly he desires a return to rampant money supply growth and asset inflation when he said, "The Committee is prepared to provide additional monetary accommodation through unconventional measures
if it proves necessary, especially if the outlook were to deteriorate significantly.
" What Bernanke means by such rhetoric is that the Fed will not only monetize assets held by banks, but will purchase assets directly from consumers -
thereby placing money directly into their hands.
For instance, the Fed could buy stocks and real estate directly from the public.
The Fed could buy a trillion-plus dollars worth of S&P 500 stocks.
Consumers that sold stock to the Fed would receive funds that didn't previously exist.
M1 money supply would boom as demand deposits surged.
But if the Fed continued to hold interest rates to zero, banks would continue to pay near-zero interest on their deposits. So, American consumers would then be faced with a choice:
earn pennies on their savings accounts
or take the cash out and jump onboard the soaring stock market.
Originally posted by St Udio
the sept 20th timetable could be about right...
consider that the FED might get directly into the stock market
(instead of the present covert financing the TBTF Banks stock speculation funds)
then Reinhardt's DOW up- DOW down forecast could be correct...
the short term stock price increase would hyperinflate the S&P 500
used in the example (snippet below)
...but in the long term the dollars spent will be worth-even less
so the Market goes UP but the actual value goes bust...
enjoy the thrill ride of the 20th onward
here's the thought provoking read i recently came across:
Speculation on non-traditional Fed activity is not a vain exercise.
Bernanke's speech last week gave warning of major initiatives to come.
"
He also showed just how strongly he desires a return to rampant money supply growth and asset inflation when he said, "The Committee is prepared to provide additional monetary accommodation through unconventional measures
if it proves necessary, especially if the outlook were to deteriorate significantly.
" What Bernanke means by such rhetoric is that the Fed will not only monetize assets held by banks, but will purchase assets directly from consumers -
thereby placing money directly into their hands.
For instance, the Fed could buy stocks and real estate directly from the public.
The Fed could buy a trillion-plus dollars worth of S&P 500 stocks.
Consumers that sold stock to the Fed would receive funds that didn't previously exist.
M1 money supply would boom as demand deposits surged.
But if the Fed continued to hold interest rates to zero, banks would continue to pay near-zero interest on their deposits. So, American consumers would then be faced with a choice:
earn pennies on their savings accounts
or take the cash out and jump onboard the soaring stock market.
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- Economists don’t expect many bright spots in the economic data in the coming week that will highlight the gloom of a newly-crippled housing market and a factory sector that is running out of steam after leading the recovery.
* following a significant amount of geopolitical and.. socio-economic brainstorming.. i have been gradually coming to a recent and pessimistic conclusion.. that the current phase/battle/skirmish of the always existing and never ending.. war between management vs. labor and.. the powers that be vs. the powerless.. is much, much more aggressive (on the part of management).. than i had previously imagined or even believed possible *
* after much analysis, i have come to realize that.. management is not f-cking around this time.. and management is not going to fight fairly nor legally *
* labor is under the false assumption that some kind of.. natural/inevitable economic reversal from bust to boom.. is in the near-term, mid-term or even long-term cards.. and labor.. is very, very wrong * * labor doesn’t know it (yet).. but this may be the greatest/bloodiest battle.. ever fought until now in the war between management and labor (and labor hasn’t a clue) *
* one railway project in illinois.. and a green revolution that at it’s virtual onset.. has more blind but possibly justified critics than.. disingenuous and self-serving but possibly well-meaning.. pragmatic proponents.. is a very, very slow introduction to an.. economic boom cycle among developed nations *
* the moniker “dark ages” has crept into a dark, dismal area of my mind.. that seems to be incapable of forgetting the possibility *
* if the hens don’t get their sh-t together.. they will find themselves unknowing and unwilling participants.. in what might very well be the biggest culling/liquidation.. the fox and his associates have ever engaged in
Originally posted by St Udio
the sept 20th timetable could be about right...
consider that the FED might get directly into the stock market
(
here's the thought provoking read i recently came across:
Speculation on non-traditional Fed activity is not a vain exercise.
Bernanke's speech last week gave warning of major initiatives to come.
"
He also showed just how strongly he desires a return to rampant money supply growth and asset inflation when he said, "The Committee is prepared to provide additional monetary accommodation through unconventional measures
if it proves necessary, especially if the outlook were to deteriorate significantly.
" What Bernanke means by such rhetoric is that the Fed will not only monetize assets held by banks, but will purchase assets directly from consumers -
thereby placing money directly into their hands.
For instance, the Fed could buy stocks and real estate directly from the public.
The Fed could buy a trillion-plus dollars worth of S&P 500 stocks.
Consumers that sold stock to the Fed would receive funds that didn't previously exist.
M1 money supply would boom as demand deposits surged.
But if the Fed continued to hold interest rates to zero, banks would continue to pay near-zero interest on their deposits. So, American consumers would then be faced with a choice:
earn pennies on their savings accounts
or take the cash out and jump onboard the soaring stock market.
...www.321gold.com...
i put the emphasis on the 'Unconventional Measures' that Bernanke just warned us of... in a cloudy & coded official policy statement just made the other day