ricky2tricky4city
Steffen Freund
There will always be the further transfer of wealth between the haves and have nots.
There will be plenty who will lose the lot and those with a lot, getting a lot more. For what purpose I'm not quite sure.
There will always be the further transfer of wealth between the haves and have nots.
All is well,.... we've turned the corner?The FTSE jumped by over 9% today...
Thoughts?
Thinking about it, it closed yesterday at just a fraction below 5000. I guess that could've triggered a significant amount of buy orders.
Up nearly another 4% in early trading today. WTF?
That can't have been the bottom?
Printing money won't help the economy (or anyone) in the long run.
Unless we all just decide to zero everything out
It's pretty much been the strategy over the last decade though hasn't it?
Missed the chance to get in under 5K, think there will be a few more dips yet once 1st quarter figures comes out and companies start to report some results.
Exactly.It's pretty much been the strategy over the last decade though hasn't it?
Exactly.
We can't have pain and we can't face up to anything.
It's a political and human weakness.
And all the while we go on inflating even bigger bubbles than 2008...
Money only works on good faith. That you take it on good faith that a piece of paper with a ladies head on it, has intrinsic value. Or a shell or a massive stone in the case of the Rai islands in the pacific (google 'Rai stones').
Financial markets are the same now. If people believe it, it works. My take is there is even more cash floating around now, and little income from bank interest rates, so there is a lot of faith in markets.
Certain stocks will see big % earning increases - supermarkets, laptop manufacturers - while others like airlines will obviously suffer short term.
Yeah, I've a reasonable idea of how these things work.
One of the reasons that there is so much cash floating around is precisely because of historically low interest rates - and I was actually referring as much to central bank policy on this issue as quantitative easing. Too-low interest rates were cited as one of the seeds of the 2008 crisis. They've been lower, and for longer, since, with central banks showing at best, a weak appetite to 'normalise'. Meanwhile, asset prices rocket skywards...
The 2008 crisis wasn't caused by interest rates. It was caused by bad debt and a lack of faith.