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- RetailerL commented Jul 30, 2015
Let him play his role. Let us play ours. It's as simple as that.
- RetailerL commented Jun 17, 2015
For them - not forth. Apologies for the typo
- RetailerL commented Jun 17, 2015
The only way forth to say their analyses seldom prove wrong. Of course the "downside tit" thing is not greatly attractive... Cheers
- RetailerL commented Jun 1, 2015
Typo: nothing wrong "with" it (in lieu of nothing wrong "both" it). Apols.
- RetailerL commented Jun 1, 2015
Mr Dixon in need to make himself heard, Mima. Probably because of his business agreement with Reuters. Nothing wrong both it. However, from a trading perspective I hardly see any use in trying and predict the outcome of the negotiations. As long as ...
- RetailerL commented Apr 29, 2015
Persisting softness does not bode well for a rate hike, let alone a meaningful one. Global wise, political, and economic deadlines between 2015 and 2016 make a hike in late 2016 more likely IMHO. We may see more of this in the coming months.
- RetailerL commented Apr 23, 2015
That's well put. It accurately picks the sense of "no opinion expressed in the largest possible number of words" so en-vogue amongst many (not all) asset managers at big names. At least when these guys interview... However, we should not forget who ...
- RetailerL commented Apr 9, 2015
I have read the outlook. Behind the sleek language there's nothing new. In addition, the outlook doesn't look particularly well construed. It may depend on the report being designed for a different audience than traders. In any case, most opinions ...
- RetailerL commented Apr 7, 2015
No surprise the IMF report sounds so cautious. It is fully consistent with a "new mediocre" perspective. The shock has been hard. No wonder recovery is taking so long. Once the lows have been left behind, the most advanced economies still need to ...
- RetailerL commented Apr 2, 2015
Without looking to superimpose any bias to the intraday outlooks, may I bring to your attention some enticing food for thought. Ben Bernanke's blog at the Brookings Institution unfolds some interesting line of reasoning on why interest rates are ...
- Posts by Member Search: 'RetailerL'