Bund, Tbond e la storia infinita (VM 91.5 anni)

f4f ha scritto:
dan24 ha scritto:
Santa scrofa di finemccanica... :-o

stamane mi è venuto in mente il nome da dare al nostro hedgefunz

qualcosa tipo

shinoka

bello aggressivo e incomprensibbile
in giapponese
dalle tre parole

shi -- no -- ka



traduzione
sempre, solo, short :lol: :lol:

bellissimo :lol:

datemi un miliardo di euro da gestire e andate tranquilli.....che finmeccanica la faccio fallire :D
 
f4f ha scritto:
tranquilli
è l'unica parola che mi manda nel panico :eek:


tranquilli darà ottime soddisfazioni questa operazione....media a 23,42....l'ultime shortate a 23,68....il tp rimane a 22 :D entro stasera :-o :-o

1171621328screenhunter_05feb.1611.24.gif


:-o
 
ciao Cè

mi hanno fatto vedere il pari su finmeccanica ed adesso che fanno risalgono? PROTTTTT

gli andasse di traverso...tutti a coprirsi di corsa....sti trader intraday....

io ho tp devastanti :D
 
Cercano di rallentare....

By Eadie Chen

BEIJING, Feb 16 (Reuters) - China tightened its grip on credit yet again on Friday in an attempt to prevent a torrent of cash generated by record trade surpluses from fuelling an unwanted rebound in capital spending.

The People's Bank of China (PBOC), in a surprise announcement on the eve of the Lunar New Year holidays, ordered lenders to tie up another half a percent of their deposits in reserve at the central bank instead of loaning the money out.


The increase in required reserves, the fifth since last June and the second this year, came a day after the central committee of the ruling Communist Party said controlling investment and credit growth would be a key policy task this year.

"This move has come a little earlier than we had expected but is not likely to be the end of the tightening phase," said Sean Callow, a currency strategist with Westpac Bank in Singapore.

The increase takes the required reserves to 10 percent for big banks and to 10.5 percent for smaller banks.

"This hike has delivered a strong tightening signal right before the Chinese New Year," said Hong Liang at Goldman Sachs.
 
BRUSSELS, Feb 16 (Reuters) - The euro zone's foreign trade surplus shrank to 2.5 billion euros ($3.3 billion) in December from a revised surplus for November of 5.1 billion euros, the European Union statistical office Eurostat said on Friday.

The figure for December 2005 was minus 1.1 billion euros.

The non-seasonally adjusted figures showed that in the whole of 2006, the euro zone had a 8.2 billion-euro trade deficit, compared with a surplus of 16.2 billion euros in 2005, mainly due to higher costs of energy imports.

Eurostat said the euro area boosted its non-seasonally adjusted exports by 8 percent to 118.1 billion euros year-on-year in December while imports grew by 4 percent to 115.7 billion euros.


Economists polled by Reuters had expected a 2.5-billion-euro trade surplus in December.

For the whole, then 25-nation EU, December brought a trade deficit of 7.3 billion euros.

Eurostat also said that in December exports, seasonally adjusted, rose 2.3 percent month-on-month and imports 2.7 percent.

Non-seasonally adjusted figures showed that the deficit in energy trade soared to 227.5 billion euros for the euro zone in the January-November period from 181.3 billion euro in the same period of 2005.

But the surplus in manufacturing good increased to 223.8 billion euros over the period from 206 billion euros in the first 11 months of 2005, boosted by strong sales of machinery and vehicles.

The euro zone's trade deficit with China, which some politicians complain floods the EU with cheap imports, grew to 81.7 billion euro in the January-November period from 68.1 billion euros in the like period of 2005.

The deficit with Russia, the euro zone's main energy supplier, widened to 37.9 billion euro in the first 11 months of 2006 from 29.6 billion euro in the similar period of 2005 as prices of oil stayed high for most of last year.
 

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