Derivati USA: CME-CBOT-NYMEX-ICE BUND, TBOND and the middle of the guado (VM 69) (4 lettori)

f4f

翠鸟科
lo spooore si è ri-perso la mm200

da questo G8 non mi aspetto novità -- il che è una brutta novità :rolleyes: in tempi di crisi
 

Fernando'S

Forumer storico
'sto g8 conta un tubo
ho aggiornato il count ( sempre uguale è )
http://www.investireoggi.it/forum/il-prudente-vt2583.html?p=974505#post974505

per farvi esercitare, domanda: quali sono i prox supporti per il dax ? e perchè ?

il conteggio che ho indicato è rialzista o ribassista nel breve periodo?
e invece come è nel piu' lungo periodo ?
nel breve periodo, il raggiungimento del primo o secondo target come sposta le probabilità?
 
Ultima modifica:

gipa69

collegio dei patafisici
Hu quits G8 trip to tackle Xinjiang crisis

By Kathrin Hille in Urumqi and Richard McGregor in Beijing
Published: July 7 2009 05:46 | Last updated: July 8 2009 06:06

0a730962-6adb-11de-861d-00144feabdc0.jpg

Hu Jintao, the Chinese president, on Wednesday cut short his visit to Italy, where he was planning to attend the annual Group of Eight summit of world leaders, three days after the worst ethnic unrest in China since the Cultural Revolution erupted in the Muslim-dominated Xinjiang autonomous region.
Mr Hu, who has yet to comment officially on the crisis, had been expected to play a high profile role in this week’s summit, with China pushing for a bigger voice for developing countries in international monetary policy.
The president flew home ahead of the start of the summit on Wednesday because of the “situation in Xinjiang”, according to government news agency Xinhua. He had been in Rome since Sunday, the day more than 150 people, mostly Han Chinese, were killed in riots in Xinjiang.
Officials have since struggled to restore calm to Urumqi, the region’s capital. On Wednesday, there were reports of hundreds of Uighurs wielding make-shift weapons on the streets and confronting the heavy police presence. This came a day after gangs of Han Chinese defied a government crackdown and took to the streets seeking revenge against the Muslim Uighur community.
The authorities had appeared to have the city under control by Tuesday morning, with shops opening and public transport running for the first time since Sunday. By mid-morning, small groups of Uighurs had returned to the streets, prompting many Chinese small businesses to barricade their doors and arm staff with makeshift weapons.
EDITOR’S CHOICE

Audio slideshow: Kathrin Hille’s eyewitness account from Urumqi - Jul-07


Mobs seek revenge for Uighur riots - Jul-07


Beijing handles political management of riots - Jul-07


Beijing accuses exile in US - Jul-07


Kazakhstan warns against travel to Xinjiang - Jul-08


In Pictures: Unrest in China’s Xinjiang region - Jul-07




But gangs of Han Chinese armed with sticks and bars started to form in the early afternoon and poured down two main streets towards the Great Bazaar, Urumqi’s traditional Uighur trading quarter.
Han Chinese, many of whom are angry at the failure of security forces to protect their community on Sunday, later cheered on riot police when they intervened to separate them from Uighurs with whom they were fighting.
On Wednesday, the Organization of Islamic Conference expressed “deep concern” regarding the “use of disproportionate force” in Xinjiang.
“The Islamic world is expecting from China, a major and responsible power in the world arena with historical friendly relations with the Muslim world, to deal with the problem of Muslim Minority in China in broader perspective that tackles the root-causes of the problem.”
“The OIC is ready to extend assistance and to consult with the Chinese Government about efforts to create a climate of peace and stability in the region,” the organization said in a statement.
The Xinjiang riots are of deep concern to Beijing, as they could trigger unrest among other minority groups with complaints similar to those of the Uighurs. Protests spread to the Uighur-majority oasis town of Kashgar on Tuesday, the state news agency Xinhua reported.
Chinese officials have sought to blame Rebiya Kadeer, an exiled Uighur leader, and others for the violence.
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Ms Kadeer has dismissed Beijing’s charges.
China’s embassy in the Netherlands was attacked by exiled pro-Uighur activists who threw rocks that smashed windows, and two men threw Molotov cocktails at a Munich consulate, a foreign ministry spokesman said.
Sunday’s protests were sparked by the deaths of two Uighurs in clashes with Han Chinese at a toy factory near Hong Kong late last month.
The Communist party secretary of Xinjiang, Wang Lequan, who is under intense pressure from Beijing to bring the volatile situation under control, pleaded to Han Chinese not to take the law into their own hands. “Some Han people took to the streets in Urumqi today, disrupting social orders. This is not necessary at all,” he said.
Li Zhi, the Communist party chief in Urumqi city, said the authorities had arrested more than 1,400 suspects allegedly involved in the Sunday riots.
Uighur women also took to the streets on Tuesday to protest against the arrest of their husbands and sons. “My husband was detained at gunpoint. They were hitting people, they were stripping people naked. My husband was scared so he locked the door, but the police broke down the door and took him away,” a woman, who gave her name as Aynir told the Associated Press. She said about 300 people were arrested in the market in the southern section of town.
Mr Li said the men arrested had all been caught red-handed. “We caught them in the act of beating, smashing, robbing, burning and killing. We dragged them out from under beds still with clubs in their hands,” he said.
Beijing has battled against a low-level insurgency in the region of Xinjiang for decades, but unrest has grown in recent years as many Uighurs began to feel left behind by rapid economic growth that benefits mainly members of China’s dominant Han ethnic group who have moved there.
The Uighurs, who comprise just under half the region’s population, had long complained at Communist rule in Xinjiang, saying that officials restrict religious worship, stifle their culture and keep most of the economic benefits in the region’s oil and natural gas reserves for their own community.
Xinjiang has seen waves of Han immigration for ­decades. According to the official point of view, which is shared by most Han Chinese, that is only positive. Anyone who rejects it is viewed as a separatist.
For Urumqi’s angry Han, however, passions are boiling over. At sunset, with just half an hour to go to the 9pm curfew, ever larger groups of stick- and knife-wielding young men came marching south from all over Urumqi. Police, soldiers and the fire brigade erected several roadblocks, but crowds soon regrouped.
A young man who had been stopped at an army barricade on a bridge flew into a rage.
“Soldiers, you must treat the people well, for it is the people who feed you!” he screamed, waving his stick at a trooper guarding Urumqi’s military headquarters.


Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2009
 

gipa69

collegio dei patafisici
ABC correttiva primo target 44espicci, il primo target sarebbe la conferma del conteggio, il secondo proietterebbe un nuovo conteggio a 5, quindi per il lungo dobbia attendere dove si posiziona la correzione attuale....
 

Ebenezer Scrooge

Forumer attivo
'sto g8 conta un tubo
ho aggiornato il count ( sempre uguale è )
http://www.investireoggi.it/forum/il-prudente-vt2583.html?p=974505#post974505

per farvi esercitare, domanda: quali sono i prox supporti per il dax ? e perchè ?

il conteggio che indicato è rialzista o ribassista nel breve periodo?
e invece come è nel piu' lungo periodo ?
nel breve periodo, il raggiungimento del primo o secondo target come sposta le probabilità?

Uhmm... dunque vediamo... un aiutino no? :D
 

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