Bernanke press conference

#27
#27
Are you saying the real debt burden of the banks will not go down? Are you trying to say that?

Yes. Inflation presumably helps with payments toward current debt, but income will take a similar beating and require additional leverage to generate income that justifies risk in leverage, but you knew that.
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#28
#28
Yes. Inflation presumably helps with payments toward current debt, but income will take a similar beating and require additional leverage to generate income that justifies risk in leverage, but you knew that.
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Not with QE-infinity, BPV. :facepalm:

This is a great tutorial on why it is naked class warfare.
 
#29
#29
Not with QE-infinity, BPV. :facepalm:

This is a great tutorial on why it is naked class warfare.

Are you this dense? QE forever does nothing but obliterate near term income, which has to be replaced.
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#30
#30
Are you this dense? QE forever does nothing but obliterate near term income, which has to be replaced.
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Much to learn you still have.

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#31
#31
Are you saying the real debt burden of the banks will not go down? Are you trying to say that?

if interest rates are at all time lows and the fed is going to allow them to increase how is the debt burden going to go down in the future?
 
#32
#32
Much to learn you still have.

AOTC%20Dooku%20and%20Yoda.jpg

says the guy who clearly doesn't know what debt is on a bank balance sheet or how it works. Keep making things up, as surely someone around here is still senseless enough to listen.
 
#44
#44
$1563.00 for 1 little oz of pure gold..This is a intresting write up, im wondering how low they can push the greenback because it's getting ugly. "with the Fed sending a strong dovish message, we see few significant triggers for an immediate dollar turnaround,"
"It is hard to be optimistic on the (dollar's) long-term prospects, given the Fed's ability to surprise on the dovish side, the ongoing overhang of U.S. dollar assets among reserve managers and the concerns that have emerged on long-term U.S. fiscal prospects," CitiFX said in a research note.
 
#46
#46
In December of 2009 Dropski made to the remark to
get back with him in two years when gold would be
$500.

This past December I reminded him of that and to
his credit he was man enough to admit that he had
been wrong, at least in the short term.

I don't know if I mentioned it at the time but I thought
then that silver was due for a ride, as silver traditionally
has done.

I believe it as $17 then and it was $45 the last time
I looked, that is nearly 300% in 3 months, making it a
far better investment than gold.

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