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The Really Useless Thread

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  • Post# 58,681
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  • Feb 19, 2012 12:19pm
  • attila
    Joined Mar 2009 | 12,626 Posts
Quoting pkimnyc
Yea, think its allergy. Picked up an eyedrop. Feels much better. Never had it before. I don't know what happened.
Red eyes... Good for hiding in a cherry tree..
  • Post# 58,682
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  • Feb 19, 2012 12:44pm
  • kill56
    Joined Nov 2009 | 16,497 Posts | Status: voodoo boodoo hit man


Late last week, the vast majority of media coverage reported the next bailout for Greece is basically a done deal. A few reports Saturday suggest it is unwise to believe we are a rubber stamp away from bailout II being approved. Even if Greece gets the next check, it appears as if the Greek tragedy will continue (something we already knew).
The excerpts below come from an article published by the Guardian:
Angela Merkel, Mario Monti and Lucas Papademos 'confident' deal on €130bn (£108bn) bailout would be struck on Monday, but concerns are growing behind the scenes.
The German news weekly Der Spiegel reports that a majority of eurogroup finance ministers are readying themselves for a collapse of the latest rescue package on Monday - or, at least, leaving it to a planned EU summit on 1 March to decide.
Greek hopes of winning the final go-ahead for a new €130bn (£108bn) bailout when eurozone finance ministers meet on Monday could be shattered even though Athens has agreed to further bruising savings.
The optimism seeped into global markets with the Dow Jones rising towards 13,000 points in New York and the FTSE 100 inching close to the 6000-mark. But, behind the scenes, sources indicated it could be seriously misplaced.
"Scepticism is especially strong among the AAA-rated states (Germany, Finland, the Netherlands) whether Greece can turn it around," said Maria Fekter, Austrian finance minister. "The threat of a Greek default is not off the table."
In Berlin officials rebutted widespread reports of a growing rift between Merkel, who backs Greece staying a member of the euro, and Schäuble.
Amid growing evidence of a significant split between Merkel and her finance minister Wolfgang Schäuble on a new Greek bailout, some officials spoke darkly of Athens being allowed to default within the eurozone by early summer.
In a seemingly endless tussle between stability and solidarity, finance ministers could end up agreeing to the bailout but only in tranches - with the first one, required for Greece to repay €14.5bn of debt by 20 March, held in an escrow account. This account would be topped up only if Athens did indeed service its debts and implement reforms.
An article in the Telegraph (excerpts below) says Monday's EU meeting may leave the markets disappointed:
Plans for Greece to default, potentially leaving the euro, have been drafted in Germany as the European Union begins to face up to the fact that Greek debt is spiralling out of control - with or without a second bailout.
The German finance ministry is actively pushing for Greece to declare itself bankrupt and to agree a "haircut" on the bulk of its debts held by banks, a move that would be classed as a default by financial markets.
Eurozone finance ministers meet on Monday to approve the next tranche of loans from the EU and the International Monetary Fund, designed to stave off national bankruptcy while the new Greek government puts the country's finances in order.
But the severe austerity measures being demanded have caused such fury in Greece, and the cuts required are so deep, that Wolfgang Schäuble, the German finance minister, does not believe that any government would be able to implement them.
Mr Schäuble's pessimism will not be welcomed in Athens. The hugely influential German politician's doubts have been growing for several weeks, and prompted angry exchanges when Greece accused Germany of trying to drive it out of the euro.
His scepticism is not yet fully shared by Angela Merkel, who is said still to be determined to prevent Greece's financial collapse. "She thinks Greece going bust could cause a shock wave that buries other countries - with Spain and Italy among them. It could break apart the entire monetary union," said an official.
But it has support from Austria and Finland - holding the prospect that a eurozone meeting tomorrow will fail to agree the next set of EU-IMF payments for Greece.
The standard response in Europe is to kick the can down the road. Therefore, it seems reasonable to expect some progress on Sunday and Monday, but not as much as is priced into the markets. As always, next week should be interesting.
  • Post# 58,683
  • Quote
  • Feb 19, 2012 12:50pm
  • kill56
    Joined Nov 2009 | 16,497 Posts | Status: voodoo boodoo hit man
read bastards

Greece's day of reckoning is only the start
Another week and another Greek deadline has come and gone. But EU leaders have vowed yet again that a final decision will come on Monday, and this time they really, really mean it. Except that they're still working over the weekend on the final details of the accord, so yet another impasse or breakdown could materialize. But we'll give them the benefit of the doubt and expect that EU finance ministers will approve the second bailout, likely requiring some form of escrow account. Such an arrangement will set the stage for further showdowns in the months ahead, as Greece will repeatedly need to meet deficit reduction targets to obtain subsequent aid disbursements, and their track record there is not good.
While we think the Eurogroup will approve the next Greek bailout on Monday, we can't rule out last minute hang-ups on key issues, potentially pushing the decision into the March 1-2 EU Summit. Eurogroup officials will meet informally on Sunday night and begin the formal session around 1430GMT on Monday. If they do approve the bailout, we would look for risk assets (stocks and commodities) and EUR to make yet another minor relief rally. Clearly, if they don't approve of the aid, we would expect risk markets and EUR to come off relatively hard, as the risk of a disorderly default would be intensified. The ultimate deadline to keep in mind is the March 20 maturity of EUR 14.5 bio in Greek government debt.
While much attention has been focused on the question of whether Greece will or won't receive the second bailout package and avoid a default, we think the bigger risks are from the fallout over the Greek debt swap deal with private sector investors (PSI). In this situation, we are looking at many so-called 'known unknowns.' This stems from the credit default swaps on Greek government debt and whether they will be triggered, which financial firms are on the hook for them, and for how much.
The current terms of the PSI negotiations strongly suggest that a 'credit event' will be declared, but ultimately that's up to a committee of ISDA (International Swaps Dealers Association, the CDS and derivatives industry self-regulatory body) to determine. However, reports circulating on Friday indicated that some private creditors were already preparing legal action against the Greek government over the amount of losses they're being forced to swallow. Friday also saw the Greek government announce that it's preparing a 'collective action clause' law (CAC) for outstanding Greek government debt. CAC's permit a super-majority of bond holders to alter the terms of existing bonds, making the debt swap deal a non-voluntary affair. Various credit rating agencies have indicated imposition of CAC's would constitute a 'credit event', likely triggering CDS payouts. This brings us back to the known unknowns of which financial firms are liable and for how much, potentially sparking global financial sector upheaval as investors retreat to safe havens. And then there are the 'unknown unknowns,' where we don't know what we don't know. For many, this is the bigger risk out there, potentially making the fallout from the Greek debt deal make Lehman look like a walk in the park.
Overall, we think a resolution to the Greek rescue drama next week may simply be the start of a larger, messier drama involving previously unentangled financial institutions globally. At the minimum, we would expect a deal on Greece to offer only a short-lived respite, before markets begin to question anew the sustainability of Greece over the longer haul.
Further JPY-weakness may be in store
The JPY has undergone a distinct adjustment lower versus other major currencies over the past week following the BOJ's decision to initiate another round of QE and establish an inflation target of +1.0% (latest CPI was -0.3%), suggesting more QE will be needed in the future. Together with Japan's trade surplus evaporating into a deficit (January trade data due out on Monday morning in Tokyo; adjusted trade deficit of -JPY 850 bio expected), we think there is scope for further JPY weakness in the weeks ahead. Anecdotal reports also suggest Japanese investors started to actively reduce their portfolio hedges, leading them to buy foreign FX and sell JPY, adding yet another flow to JPY-selling pressure.
USD/JPY and many of the JPY-crosses have reached 3-month highs and are testing key resistance levels, such as USD/JPY 79.50/80.00 and EUR/JPY 104.50/105.00. While we think there is further upside in store, we would avoid getting long at these levels and prefer to wait for a pullback to pursue long entries (selling JPY), ideally around 78.00/50 in USD/JPY and 102.70/103.20 in EUR/JPY. Breaks above the resistance zones mentioned above may see JPY-pairs move directly higher in this adjustment. Potential turmoil emanating from Europe next week could provide the desired pullback, if investors turn back to the JPY and the USD on safe haven demand.
Light US data may see risk rally stall
Next week sees the US President's Day holiday on Monday where US stock and futures markets will be closed. The rest of the week sees relatively minor US economic data (existing/new home sales; weekly jobless claims) only late in the week. We note this because the risk rally currently underway has been extremely tentative and seems to require frequent injections of better-than-expected news and data to keep going. More positive US data reports of late have been a primary source of that optimism, but with minimal data out of the US next week, that medicine may be in short supply. Together with potential disappointment or outright disarray out of Europe, we would not be surprised to see a more negative correction to risk assets and a further bounce for the USD.
  • Post# 58,684
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  • Feb 19, 2012 3:03pm
  • wannaberich
    Joined Aug 2009 | 5,062 Posts | Status: i'm a pig!
hi.
dreams do come true.
  • Post# 58,685
  • Quote
  • Feb 19, 2012 3:05pm
  • longshot_nl
    Joined Jan 2010 | 2,074 Posts | Status: Member
they took our job..

Inserted Video
I approve this message.
  • Post# 58,686
  • Quote
  • Feb 19, 2012 3:10pm
  • wannaberich
    Joined Aug 2009 | 5,062 Posts | Status: i'm a pig!
K, u invisible fuck, west for salvation?
dreams do come true.
  • Post# 58,687
  • Quote
  • Feb 19, 2012 3:10pm
  • fxjawn
    Joined Jun 2011 | 12,711 Posts | Status: UN-RE-TIRED
where them bears at?

u guys might want to read up

http://www.forex-day-trading.com/fx-.../forex-charts/
  • Post# 58,688
  • Quote
  • Feb 19, 2012 3:13pm
  • wannaberich
    Joined Aug 2009 | 5,062 Posts | Status: i'm a pig!
they went out to buy more lube.

how u doing bro? i know u hate weekedns but how was this?

we're still gonna fade 1.3130-10? don't know any more...

Quoting fxjawn
where them bears at?

u guys might want to read up

http://www.forex-day-trading.com/fx-.../forex-charts/
dreams do come true.
  • Post# 58,689
  • Quote
  • Feb 19, 2012 3:14pm
  • kill56
    Joined Nov 2009 | 16,497 Posts | Status: voodoo boodoo hit man
Quoting wannaberich
K, u invisible fuck, west for salvation?
hey bro hope u did not fuck up u weekend with bitch next door

still 3250 above or below walking the dog for now till wee see WTF the deal with greece
  • Post# 58,690
  • Quote
  • Feb 19, 2012 3:16pm
  • fxjawn
    Joined Jun 2011 | 12,711 Posts | Status: UN-RE-TIRED
Quoting wannaberich
they went out to buy more lube.

how u doing bro? i know u hate weekedns but how was this?

we're still gonna fade 1.3130-10? don't know any more...
already done bro... i faded earlear... got filled about 3150 bout to take the pips here
  • Post# 58,691
  • Quote
  • Feb 19, 2012 3:22pm
  • fxjawn
    Joined Jun 2011 | 12,711 Posts | Status: UN-RE-TIRED
dang i missed kenny....
  • Post# 58,692
  • Quote
  • Feb 19, 2012 3:23pm
  • wannaberich
    Joined Aug 2009 | 5,062 Posts | Status: i'm a pig!
LOL one day u're gonna get me into trouble with my wife with that bitch next door talk LOL

good thing there aren't any bitches next door! in fact the next door is like 1km away lol



Quoting kill56
hey bro hope u did not fuck up u weekend with bitch next door

still 3250 above or below walking the dog for now till wee see WTF the deal with greece
dreams do come true.
  • Post# 58,693
  • Quote
  • Feb 19, 2012 3:24pm
  • wannaberich
    Joined Aug 2009 | 5,062 Posts | Status: i'm a pig!
way to go man. ur brokers already trading? mine only in a couple of hours or so...

Quoting fxjawn
already done bro... i faded earlear... got filled about 3150 bout to take the pips here
dreams do come true.
  • Post# 58,694
  • Quote
  • Feb 19, 2012 3:25pm
  • wannaberich
    Joined Aug 2009 | 5,062 Posts | Status: i'm a pig!
yeah me too. was gonna ask him if he wanted those 22 lbs back in cheese LOL
Quoting fxjawn
dang i missed kenny....
dreams do come true.
  • Post# 58,695
  • Quote
  • Feb 19, 2012 3:29pm
  • fxjawn
    Joined Jun 2011 | 12,711 Posts | Status: UN-RE-TIRED
Quoting wannaberich
yeah me too. was gonna ask him if he wanted those 22 lbs back in cheese LOL
na dont make fun of him i think he was actually pretty sick to loose those pounds bro
  • Post# 58,696
  • Quote
  • Feb 19, 2012 3:30pm
  • kill56
    Joined Nov 2009 | 16,497 Posts | Status: voodoo boodoo hit man
Quoting fxjawn
already done bro... i faded earlear... got filled about 3150 bout to take the pips here
well done u are a onada man then
  • Post# 58,697
  • Quote
  • Feb 19, 2012 3:31pm
  • PhAnTi'
    Joined Aug 2010 | 12,806 Posts | Status: Member
tok tok hope everyone is fine ?
Hero calls followed by margin calls...
  • Post# 58,698
  • Quote
  • Feb 19, 2012 3:34pm
  • kill56
    Joined Nov 2009 | 16,497 Posts | Status: voodoo boodoo hit man
Quoting PhAnTi'
tok tok hope everyone is fine ?
whats up stranger
  • Post# 58,699
  • Quote
  • Feb 19, 2012 3:35pm
  • fxjawn
    Joined Jun 2011 | 12,711 Posts | Status: UN-RE-TIRED
Quoting kill56
well done u are a onada man then
lol yea brother thanks spread was only 4 so fuck it... realquick one half leverage
  • Post# 58,700
  • Quote
  • Feb 19, 2012 3:43pm
  • wannaberich
    Joined Aug 2009 | 5,062 Posts | Status: i'm a pig!
oooops, ur right. my bad.

Quoting fxjawn
na dont make fun of him i think he was actually pretty sick to loose those pounds bro
dreams do come true.
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