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Global Economy Bursting?

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Investors are suing. Seem that once an order was placed, it could not be cancelled even though it had not been filled. Purchases were still being run in at $41+ while the stock had fallen to $38. Mass AG has subponeaed Morgan Stanley records. Zuckerburg sold 30m shares tocash in while the stock spirals downwards.

I always have a trouble deciphering your real meaning.
... If your Pro-incumbent administration ... you dump your shares if you are for the challenger ..... you buy them ......

does that accurately translate to:

... If you're Pro- the incumbent administration ... you dump your shares
If you are for the challenger ..... you buy them ......


and does that apply to Facebook only, or any & all your shares?

"Inquiring minds want to know"
Those that got FACED and were in the non trading glitch are retail investors. It was an insider set up. If you look at all the great companies going back to the 1920 and 1930 you will note they started at the height of a market to only go down/sell with it an blame it on the market.

At this point it does not matter who is in going to win in the Presidential race, they are both going to be cronies for the Corps/Wall Street. We still have that potential for a run-up due to the presidential season. I want to get back in, but am going to wait 52 days to get back in.
 
52 days? hmm.

I would not buy into Facebook because it's basically a virtual company and unlike brick and mortar, a major management disaster would see the stock plunge far below what little real estate it owns. Real estate does support a company to a point...look at Sears selling off RE. ...not that I wanted them either. Remember when everyone said WalMart could not compete with Sears? I knew in 1972 that they could when Sears wouldn't take back an obviously defective power tool I bought only days before. I have never sit foot in their stores since. I was taking home $228 every two weeks and my wife was in college. A $20 drill was a big purchase.
 
52 days? hmm.

I would not buy into Facebook because it's basically a virtual company and unlike brick and mortar, a major management disaster would see the stock plunge far below what little real estate it owns. Real estate does support a company to a point...look at Sears selling off RE. ...not that I wanted them either. Remember when everyone said WalMart could not compete with Sears? I knew in 1972 that they could when Sears wouldn't take back an obviously defective power tool I bought only days before. I have never sit foot in their stores since. I was taking home $228 every two weeks and my wife was in college. A $20 drill was a big purchase.
I listen to the big traders and they all say the same. They never really notice or ever click the advertisements on Facebook. Even my 16 year old is jaded by Facebook.

The difference between FB and WMT is that I can buy oil for my car at WMT and I can get the greasy gossip on FB. Which one actually produces a productive outcome? If I do trade FB I would wait a couple of months.
 
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I always have a trouble deciphering your real meaning.
... If your Pro-incumbent administration ... you dump your shares if you are for the challenger ..... you buy them ......

does that accurately translate to:

... If you're Pro- the incumbent administration ... you dump your shares
If you are for the challenger ..... you buy them ......


and does that apply to Facebook only, or any & all your shares?

"Inquiring minds want to know"

I was thinking only about Facebook ....... Facebook being the modern anecdote of crapitalism .....

.... corruption crapitalism leads to marxism, facism, and nazi - isms .....

... capitalism is only an idea anyways .... very difficult to achieve
 
Dallara Says Greek Euro Exit May Exceed 1 Trillion Euros

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-...k-euro-exit-may-exceeed-1-trillion-euros.html

The cost of Greece exiting the euro would be unmanageable and probably exceed the 1 trillion euros ($1.25 trillion) previously estimated by the Institute of International Finance, the group’s managing director said.

The Washington-based IIF’s projection from earlier this year is “a bit dated now” and “probably on the low side,” Charles Dallara said in an interview in Rome yesterday. “Those who think that Europe, and more broadly the global economy, are really prepared for a Greek exit should think again.”
 
Giant Lender in Spain Asks for Billions to Fend Off Collapse

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/26/b...?_r=1&nl=todaysheadlines&emc=edit_th_20120526

Spain’s banking crisis worsened Friday as the board of Bankia, the country’s biggest mortgage lender, warned that it would need an additional 19 billion euros ($23.88 billion), far beyond what the government estimated when it seized the bank and its portfolio of delinquent real estate loans earlier this month.

The government is trying to head off a collapse of the bank, which could threaten the Spanish banking industry and reverberate through the financial centers of Europe and beyond. The fear is that it will not have the money to save its banks, and their $1.25 trillion in deposits, and will need a rescue by the rest of Europe — even as political and financial leaders struggle to resolve Greece’s debt debacle.

The rising fear now is that the recent steady outflow of deposits from Spain’s banks, which are suffering from the bursting of Spain’s real estate bubble, to institutions outside the country could eventually turn into the sort of bank run that almost brought the financial world to its knees after the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008.

Spain’s debt crisis is also playing out on another front. As its banks shudder, heavily indebted regional governments are also running out of money.

_________________

Pop goes the weasel!
 
Real federal deficit dwarfs official tally (Gov't Uses Lemonade-Stand Accounting)

http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/story/2012-05-18/federal-deficit-accounting/55179748/1

The typical American household would have paid nearly all of its income in taxes last year to balance the budget if the government used standard accounting rules to compute the deficit, a USA TODAY analysis finds.

Under those accounting practices, the government ran red ink last year equal to $42,054 per household — nearly four times the official number reported under unique rules set by Congress.

A U.S. household's median income is $49,445, the Census reports.

The big difference between the official deficit and standard accounting: Congress exempts itself from including the cost of promised retirement benefits. Yet companies, states and local governments must include retirement commitments in financial statements, as required by federal law and private boards that set accounting rules.

The deficit was $5 trillion last year under those rules. The official number was $1.3 trillion. Liabilities for Social Security, Medicare and other retirement programs rose by $3.7 trillion in 2011, according to government actuaries, but the amount was not registered on the government's books.

Key findings:

•Social Security had the biggest financial slide. The government would need $22.2 trillion today, set aside and earning interest, to cover benefits promised to current workers and retirees beyond what taxes will cover. That's $9.5 trillion more than was needed in 2004.

•Deficits from 2004 to 2011 would be six times the official total of $5.6 trillion reported.

•Federal debt and retiree commitments equal $561,254 per household. By contrast, an average household owes a combined $116,057 for mortgages, car loans and other debts.

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People should be very worried of what will happen and things to come.
 
UK Home Secretary has admitted that the govt is planning for immigration restrictions and closed borders if Greece pulls out. It fears a mass of people headed to the UK in search of jobs as the UK is considered a safe-haven, as it is not tied to the Euro.
 
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