FTSE Mib Futures solointraday - Cap. 2 (4 lettori)

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solointraday

Forumer storico
ciao solo ti sei dimenticato delle promesse fatte a lampedusa di fronte alla spiaggia assediata da 5000 profughi.........un casino ed un campo di golf entro breve, una casa di proprietà già acquistata e didsetta il giorno dopo:D
azzz
è vero

non è facile stare dietro alle promesse del berlusca. domani ci prometterà una patrimoniale light. ad agosto
sarà senza zucchero così ci tiene in forma per il mare
 

solointraday

Forumer storico
deaglio dice che saltiamo se non ci salvano e che quello che dirà berlusconi non conterà nulla
siamo la vittima sacrificale che serve al mercato per portare a termine le scommesse che hanno messo in piedi sui nostri titoli di stato e sull'euro
 
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solointraday

Forumer storico
1312309754immagine332.png
 

solointraday

Forumer storico
Ormai me l'aspettavo.
La chiusura giornaliera è soggetta a molti falsi segnali comunque. Più affidabile la settimanale (40 periodi) o mensile (10 periodi). Per una inversione di lungo periodo lo s&p deve andare con decisione sotto 1.250 e restarci. Niente lower shadows stile zampe di giraffa.
a essere pignoli il close di oggi non dovrebbe essere sotto il body del minimo di giugno e di marzo, perchè li le shadows sono state importanti
 

solointraday

Forumer storico
su cnbc la replica
CUBOVISION - web tv

(Reuters) - President Barack Obama said on Tuesday a just-passed bill to raise the U.S. debt ceiling and cut spending was a first step toward ensuring the United States lives within its means but that more was needed to rebuild the world's largest economy.

Speaking at the White House, Obama made clear he expects tax reform to emerge from deliberations by a new committee of Democrats and Republicans to be established by the legislation and that a "balanced approach" in which the wealthier pay more taxes is needed for more deficit reduction.

Obama, a Democrat, said uncertainty from the bitter debt debate had been an impediment to business but the economic recovery also suffered from unforeseen problems such as the Japan earthquake and tsunami.

Obama urged Congress to pass stalled trade bills and said he wants tax cuts for the middle class and unemployment benefits extended.

"Both parties share power in Washington. And both parties need to take responsibility for improving this economy," Obama said shortly after the Senate passed the debt bill and sent it to him for signing into law.

"I'll be discussing additional ideas in the weeks ahead to help companies hire, invest and expand."

Obama chided U.S. political leaders for taking so long to resolve the impasse over the debt ceiling, bringing the country close to an unprecedented default.

"We have seen in the past few days that Washington has the ability to focus when there is a timer ticking down and when there is a looming disaster," he said. "It shouldn't take the risk of default, the risk of economic catastrophe, to get folks in this town to work together and do their jobs."

Obama also urged the Senate to break an impasse that has resulted in a partial shutdown of federal aviation programs.

"There is another stalemate in Congress right now involving our aviation industry which has stalled airport construction projects all around the country and put the jobs of tens of thousands of construction workers and others at risk because of politics," he said.

"It's another Washington-inflicted wound on America and Congress needs to break that impasse now, hopefully before the Senate adjourns, so these folks can get back to work."
 

solointraday

Forumer storico
(Reuters) - Congress buried the specter of a U.S. debt default by finally passing a deficit-cutting package on Tuesday, but uncertainties lingered over a possible painful downgrade of the top-notch American credit rating.

President Barack Obama welcomed as "an important first step" the hard-won deficit-cutting compromise to lift the government's $14.3 trillion debt ceiling after it was approved by the U.S. Senate with a vote of 74 to 26.

But, signaling possible tough political battles ahead over spending cuts and tax reform, Obama said the sacrifices required to reduce the U.S. deficit needed to be fairly shared in U.S. society, including by the wealthiest.

"Everyone is going to have to chip in, that's only fair," the president said in an address from the White House Rose Garden after the Senate approved the debt limit deal.

Final Congress approval came just hours before the Treasury's authority to borrow funds was to run out.

Obama, who will seek a second term next year, was expected to immediately sign the deal into law on Tuesday.

His signature would draw a line under months of rancorous partisan squabbling over debt and deficit strategy that had threatened chaos in global financial markets and dented America's stature as the world's economic superpower.

There was little suspense about the outcome of the vote in the Democratic-controlled Senate.

The bill overcame its biggest hurdle late on Monday when the Republican-led House of Representatives passed the $2.1 trillion deficit-reduction plan despite some resistance from recalcitrant Tea Party conservatives and disappointed liberal Democrats.

Uncertainty remained, however, over whether the budget deal goes far enough in reining in deficits to satisfy major ratings agencies, which have threatened to downgrade the United States' AAA credit rating. Such a move would raise borrowing costs and act as another drag on the stumbling economy.

Ratings agency Standard and Poor's said in mid-July there was a 50-50 chance it would cut U.S. ratings in the next three months if lawmakers failed to craft a meaningful deficit-cutting plan.

FITCH: U.S. DEFAULT RISK "EXTREMELY LOW"

Another agency, Fitch Ratings, on Tuesday called the agreement reached an "important first step" but said it was not the end of a process to put in place a credible deficit plan.

It added that the United States, like Europe, must also confront tough choices on tax and spending against a weak economic backdrop if the budget deficit and government debt was

to be cut to safer levels over the medium term.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said earlier he expected the ratings agencies to take a "careful look" at the situation but he was not sure whether the United States would be spared from a downgrade.

"I don't know. It's hard to tell," he told ABC News.

Initial relief in financial markets over an end to the gridlock quickly turned to concern on Tuesday about risk of a U.S. ratings cut as well concerns based on recent economic data that growth could remain subdued. U.S. stocks dropped even as Congress approved the deal.

The plan, which lifts the debt ceiling enough to last beyond the November 2012 elections, calls for $2.1 trillion in spending cuts spread over 10 years and creates a congressional committee to recommend a deficit-reduction package by late November.

That appears to fall short of rating agency S&P's previous assertion that $4 trillion in deficit-reduction measures would be needed to avoid a downgrade by showing that Washington was putting the country's finances in order.
 
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