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POPSNiall Ferguson And The Dollar .... into completely unwarranted European market strength. One wonders (or not) why the G-20 is more than happy to perpetuate the daily raping and pillaging of the DXY. Niall Ferguson discusses US Dollar, Fed Policy Outlook Video: (3:32) http://www.clipsyndicate.com/video/playlist/8178/1166786
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POPS Equities in UK and US Hit 2009 High The recent move into risk has been upheld with sterling moving higher against the US dollar. Be aware that the pound is being underpinned with the improved performance in equities and this position could easily be reversed.
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POPSRisk Aversion Continues Equities ended largely softer on Friday and given the current economic outlook, appear set for another nervous week. Tomorrow we will look at GE, Intel and Goldmans and expect volatility in equity markets globally over the next few days. Read more...
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POPSNew Economics of Banking technology and systems, processing and functionality are virtually free; anything that is commodity activity should be brought in as a service and all pricing is for value-add, not commodities.
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POPSBest Tax Saving Mutual Funds Kotak Mutual Fund presents Kotak Tax saver fund. It is an Open-Ended Equity Linked Savings Scheme, which offers the investor the dual advantage of potential capital appreciation as well as tax savings.
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POPSWarren Buffett's Q3 Moves Seems like he thinks U.S. automakers and retailrs are in for a long slump even though his public pronouncements elsewhere have been long term bullish on U.S. equities.
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POPSU.S. Stocks Rally as Obama Picks Tim Geithner to Head Treasury and was poised for the worst annual decline in its 80-year history after economic reports depicted a deepening recession and lawmakers postponed a vote on a plan to salvage the auto industry. Citigroup, which has about $2 trillion of assets, has fallen for nine of the last 10 days on concern more companies and consumers will default as the economy worsens. The benchmark for U.S. equities trimmed its yearly loss to 46 percent today, still the worst year since 1931. The S&P 500 tumbled 8.4 percent this week. The Dow average declined 5.3 percent, while the Nasdaq Composite Index lost 8.8 percent.