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  1. S

    why must oil exporting nations peg their currency to the dollar?

    Hasn't he been calling for this kind of stuff since the beginning his reign? The amount of conspiracy theories ET is amazing.
  2. S

    Markets to be still flooded with money

    That's why excess job growth requires tightening... and so does inflation... So... high inflation -> tighten; excess job growth -> inflation -> tighten; low job growth -> expand. Why is this not doable? (policy lag aside)
  3. S

    Markets to be still flooded with money

    Job growth and price stability (in both directions). Wait... why are 'dual mandate' in quotes? I can certainly understand that whether the Fed is able to meet their 'dual mandate', but are you implying that the dual mandate is not a legitimate goal for the Fed to achieve?
  4. S

    Moderators have destroyed elitetrader

    Since it's you, bearice, I imagine feedback@cnn.com replied within an hour? Or did the IB help chat person on your bloomberg terminal forward you directly to Mike Bloomberg (even though he's the mayor now)?
  5. S

    Markets to be still flooded with money

    Why? Because *you* disagree?
  6. S

    Markets to be still flooded with money

    So what? Weak dollar isn't bad for the US; the Fed couldn't care less about the price of gold (nor should you, unless you have a gold position). And no end in sight? There's no QE3. QE2 ends on schedule. Not sure what 'sight' you were hoping for.
  7. S

    Markets to be still flooded with money

    Because?
  8. S

    why must oil exporting nations peg their currency to the dollar?

    Saudi can't allow their own currency to float - exporting oil is basically their only business; If it did, then fluctuations in its own currency, which would be highly correlated to the price of oil in the local currency of its buyers, would make any price fixing unmanageable in a hurry. If...
  9. S

    A small yet powerful thought on inflation

    What in the world are you talking about? How does this make any sense? The drop in price of oil (assuming that's the consequence of your scenario) is made up by both short term production of these new engines and the extra growth spurred by lower input costs, and in the long term by increased...
  10. S

    US Bonds

    Pardon me, I don't see the irony....
  11. S

    US Bonds

    You were short?
  12. S

    Microsoft "Bing" Shares

    You can't possibly be this stupid.
  13. S

    US Bonds

    Those are in quotes because they are.... ironic?
  14. S

    US Bonds

    No. Neither hold it for investment.
  15. S

    Quality of Food

    It's called argyria. It's largely untreatable (there have been some recent success using laser surgery techniques). For that reason, I'm really glad eight is taking as much silver as he can.
  16. S

    Something definately wrong

    You aren't very right are you? A unit of currency circulates more than once a year....
  17. S

    Interest of Bonds?

    What in the world are you talking about? depend on what situation? How a bond pays coupon (how much, when, fixed or floating, etc) are all spelled out in either the offering document or the pricing circular. There's no uncertainty attached.
  18. S

    What are Royalties, Anyway?

    what's your point??
  19. S

    Bloomberg terminal?

    Of course you are right on two levels: -- You won't generate that kind of spread on a $5MM AUM -- You'll see a 10bp spread on liquid products. Pertaining to the second point, on one end you obviously have stuff like on the run treasury notes with bid/offer at 1/8th of 1/32; On the other...
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