Tag Archives: Prices

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Market Buzz: Japan’s GDP wows and gold hits 9-yr low

The MICEX dropped 0.98 percent and will open Thursday at 1391.98. The RTS slightly eased and gained 5.83 points, closing at 1.396.76. European market indices also gained. On Asian floors, the Euro Stoxx is up 0.50 percent to 2,809.58, France’s CAC 40 is up 0.41 percent, and Germany’s DAX is making gains, up 0.28 percent, continuing its record gain ascent. Market gains appeared immune to France’s poor Q1 news which officially put them in a recession, or Germany’s slowed growth report. In London, FTSE 100 added 0.22 percent, continuing its nine-day rally, after the Bank of England revised its growth predictions for the second quarter. On Asian floors, the index dipped down to 6,990.70 at 11:29 GMT. UK lenders led the markets- Royal Bank of Scotland jumped 1.75 percent, Barclays rallied 1.83 percent and Lloyds Banking jumped 1.87 percent. US markets ended high Wednesday. The Dow Jones gained 0.40 percent and closed and the S&P 500 rose 0.51 percent, and the NASDAQ Composite edged up 0.26 percent on the New York Exchange. Analysts await US inflation and unemployment data, set to be released at 13:30 GMT. Asian stocks were mixed on Japan’s solid 3.5 percent GDP increase, easily topping 2.7 percent estimates The Nikkei fell 1.08 percent after it hit a five-year high on Wednesday. Hong Kong’s Seng gained 0.27 percent and the Shanghai Composite added 0.59 percent Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 fell 0.20 percent on falling gold prices and mining weakness. The NZSE also dropped 0.21 percent, and on Thursday announced its 2013-2014 GDP growth forecast of 2.3 percent, compared to last year’s 3 percent growth. Both WTI and Brent are trading low. WTI is down 0.41 percent and trading at 93.91 and Brent is down 0.40 percent at 103.27. Read More

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EU probes oil companies over suspected price manipulation

The US Justice Department has come out in defence of its actions to seize phone records of The Associated Press. The seizure is believed to be linked to an investigation into whether one of the press agency’s stories about a thwarted terror plot in Yemen was based on leaked

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Aereo’s Internet TV pricing is simpler, but not cheaper

Aereo, the controversial broadcast television Internet streaming startup, will be simplifying its pricing structure on May 15. Gone will be the company's five service tiers and in their place will remain two: an $8-per-month and $12-per-month subscription with varying amount of cloud-based DVR storage. Prices for those plans will remain… Read More

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In global Monopoly game there can be only one winner

In the game of Monopoly, when you pass ‘Go’ you collect $200. This keeps the game going by adding liquidity into the system. The bank in the game is increasing the money supply and this keeps people rolling the dice; buying up property and paying taxes. Eventually, due to the luck of the dice, the player who is able to land on the most expensive properties on the board ends up being able to extract crippling amounts of rent from the other players until everyone goes bust except for the lone Monopolist who is declared the winner. Notice that in the Monopoly economy nobody works. The only activities are rolling dice and shopping for real estate, houses, and hotels. In today’s global game of Monopoly we have Quantitative Easing to replace the free money give away that occurs when players pass ‘Go.’ But instead of the token $200, players (those who work in the FIRE economy of Finance, Insurance and Real Estate) get $85 billion a month from the Federal Reserve Bank in America and similar gifts of cash from the central banks in Japan, Britain, and most of the G20. The asset prices of the houses and hotels keep going up as the free money given away by the bank: whether in the game of Monopoly or the game of the Fed is pumped into the economy. Again, nobody who has wealth in these economies works for a living. They speculate by rolling the dice and buying up assets knowing that the infusion of cash will guarantee asset price inflation.If you play Monopoly you know that eventually the player who chanced on the opportunity to buy the most expensive real estate on the board eventually wins as the rent-seeking that comes with that real estate bankrupts the rest of the players who keep collecting their free $200 each time they pass ‘Go,’ money that works its way to the Monopolist with the most powerful monopoly.Similarly in the global economy we have a situation where none of the sizeable wealth of the players was garnered through work. A list of the wealthiest in the world shows virtually all the players having gained their riches by engaging in monopoly rent-seeking through real estate speculation, gaming the banking system, manipulating stock prices, exploiting an extremely pernicious copyright monopoly or promoting and financing war: a particular monopoly of the state.We are headed to a similar ending. With most of the world’s population already bankrupt and over half of Americans now officially straddling the poverty line we see the wealth being gobbled up the lucky dice throwers sitting on the most exploitive rent-seeking properties.Just like in the game of Monopoly, there will be only 1 (or a handful) of winners at the end of the game but unlike the game, it won’t be so easy to start a new one. You don’t expect a full scale riot of a revolution staged from the losers of your average Monopoly game at home but typically this is what happens when a few at the top bankrupt the 99% at the bottom if we use history as a guide. Read More

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World News Today – GERALD CELENTE – IRAN, WW3, NUKES, MF GLOBAL, GAS PRICES, GREAT DEPRESSION

http://www.youtube.com/v/K83MWhgyW5E?version=3&f=videos&app=youtube_gdata Link: World News Today – GERALD CELENTE – IRAN, WW3, NUKES, MF GLOBAL, GAS PRICES, GREAT DEPRESSION

Dollar slips against Euro despite strong U.S. jobs report

The dollar fell against the euro Friday despite a strong US April jobs report that otherwise sent stock markets and oil prices soaring. Analysts said that an increased interest in risk assets in Europe were to blame in part for the sharp reversal of the greenback’s gains that followed the…

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JP Morgan Chase faces regulatory action over energy price manipulation in California, Michigan

JP Morgan Chase faces federal regulatory action over a scheme which manipulated energy prices in two US states, the New York Times reported Friday. The Times said it had seen a 70-page government document which indicated staff from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission intended to recommend…

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