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

oggi operazione ad kulum.... sfida con me stesso.. dovevo uscire di casa alle 14:15 e vedevo la borsa al doppio test dei 1060 ed allora mi son detto entra va e cosi ho fatto poi sono andato via e son tornato alle 16:40 giusto in tempo per chiudere la posizione in guadagno di diversi punticini.... :-o

un pazzooooooo :D andarsene per due ore emezza con posizione aperta in sto mercato , da vietare ai minori di 30 anni :-o:prr:
 
questa è forte :D tale Mr Cuff ha fatto una domanda alla Bank of England - da dove viene fuori il danaro? la risposta - questo son cose più grandi di te :D:D

manca la faccina che stampa il danaro Argyyyyyyy :D


ahhh dejavù :lol:
sono molto più belle le trascrizioni dei dialoghi negli anni '30 al parlamento USA, quando molti avevano ancora la mente fissa sul gold standard, e non mi ricordo chi, chiedeva "dove prendiamo i soldi ?". La risposta: "li stampiamo !". E da lì l'incredulità, ecc ecc.
Pensa un po' come si incazzerebbe la casalinga di Voghera se sapesse che i suoi soldi che ha in tasca sono stampati a debito dalla banca sotto casa, e ci paga gli interessi con le sue tasse :D la fortuna dei banchieri è che anche se glielo spieghi, non lo capirebbe... :specchio:
 
Ma la domanda più importante è: come farà gipa nel thread "Fallimenti banche USA", a stare a dietro a tutte quante ? :D


U.S. Banks Post Profit, but Woes Persist - WSJ.com
WASHINGTON—A total of 775 banks, or one-tenth of all U.S. banks, were on the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.'s list of "problem" institutions in the first quarter, as bad loans in the commercial real-estate market weighed on bank balance sheets.
Poor loan performance in other sectors also continued to hurt banks, with the total number of loans at least three months past due climbing for the 16th consecutive quarter, FDIC officials said in a briefing on Thursday.
"The banking system still has many problems to work through, and we cannot ignore the possibility of more financial market volatility," FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair said.
There were 702 on the FDIC's "problem" bank list at the end of 2009 and 252 at the end of 2008.
FDIC officials said they expected the number of failed banks to peak this year after climbing steadily over the past three years. Regulators have shut 72 banks so far this year, more than double the number closed by this time last year. Ms. Bair said regulators were preparing for a steady pace of additional closures through the end of the year. A total of 237 banks have failed since the beginning of 2008.
 
i deflazionistiaficionados serrano sotto

On the edge of a deflationary precipice…

Posted by Neil Hume on May 21 11:10.
The world should be discussing deflation, not inflation. The world should be dicussing buying 30-yr govts, not continually wondering like a stuck record where the first rate hike will appear.​
Albert Edwards agrees with the depressionistas at RBS.
Amid the recent euro-related turbulence, the SocGen bear says not enough attention has been paid to the rapidly vanishing core CPI inflation rates in the US and the eurozone. And it should be because Edwards reckons were are only one cyclical mishap from joining Japan in outright deflation.
Gulp.
Of all the inflation data released this week, the one that caught the markets’ attention was the UK’s dramatically higher than expected 3.7% yoy rise for April. Even the core measure of CPI managed to creep up above the 3% mark. Meanwhile the old RPI, to which most state benefits are indexed, rose a heady 5.3% – the highest pace since July 1991. While many commentators proceeded to berate the Bank of England for consistently underforecasting inflation in recent years, many also saw the first signs of the quantitatively eased pigeons coming home to roost.
But I would argue that in a year or so, we will see the UK’s relatively high inflation rate as a godsend. For elsewhere, it went almost unnoticed this week that core CPI inflation rates in the US and eurozone continue to slip-slide their way down towards zero (see chart below). Although this is seen as buoying bond prices at the margin, it is a pernicious development that investors will focus on when this cycle starts to fail. Regular readers will know that I believe that in a post-bubble world, recession follows recession with surprising rapidity. We are now only one cyclical failure away from Japanese-style outright deflation in the US and the eurozone at a time when de-leveraging still has years to run (falling prices bring the risk of a classic debt deflation trap). Impending cyclical failure and a deflation scare will trigger new lows in equities as the valuation bear market finally plays itself out with the S&P falling below 500. We therefore maintain our long-standing target of sub-2% US 10y bond yields – and that is the point when QE will really begin to get serious.
10-year Treasuries sub 2 per cent. Not that is bearish.


FT Alphaville On the edge of a deflationary precipice…
Aspetta ! Albert Edwards dice che siamo sull'orlo della deflazione, che causerà una inflazione del 20%-30% ! :D
oddio non mi fanno neanche più ridere, questo è Delirium tremens :sad:

Albert Edwards: Europe Is On The Edge Of A Deflationary Precipice That Will, Paradoxically, Usher In 20-30% Inflation | Zero SCEMO
A few days ago we pointed out that the latest Japanese GDP deflator came at multi-decade lows, this despite years of printing, pumping and other -ings. Today, Albert Edwards takes the observation of rampant regional deflation and concludes precisely what we have long claimed, that once rampant deflation is finally acknowledged by central bankers everywhere, and they are now running out for time, their only natural response to preserve the system will be to do what Japan has been doing for decades (successfully, they will claim) and respond with the most extreme round of monetization ever seen, "inevitably driving us towards out ultimate destination - 1970's style 20-30% inflation."
 

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