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2011/2021: TOTAL economic MELTDOWN

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voor 1 gewone man gaat de energierekening +- 600€ / jaar omhoog. als de gewone man mazzel hebt krijgt hij 1 dubbie meer dividend, de gewone man moet dus +- 6000 aandelen hebben.
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As unrest sweeps the Arab world, China is worried about protests among its own people. CNN's Stan Grant reports that officials are cracking down on a prominent human rights lawyer ahead of annual government meetings.
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VK:17:10 uur: De Libische telefoonmaatschappij Libyana stuurt massa-sms'jes waarin wordt oproepen buitenlanders aan te vallen. Buitenlanders 'veroorzaken problemen' en 'vernietigen het land' staat in de berichten te lezen. Naar Egypte gevluchte Libiërs hebben de sms'jes laten zien aan persbureau AFP

Dan mogen buitenlandse militairen de tel-maatschappij bombarderen.
Kom op Westen, doe eens practisch.
NoRiskAtAll
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US economics: One big Ponzi scheme

While Bernie Madoff languishes in jail, bankers continue to profit as the poor lose their homes and hope.

english.aljazeera.net/indepth/opinion...
NoRiskAtAll
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People Of Earth: Prepare For Economic Disaster

The entire global financial system is a gigantic Ponzi scheme. It is designed to keep everyone enslaved to perpetual debt. If at some point the debt spiral gets interrupted in some significant way, we are going to witness an economic disaster that is going to make what happened in 2008 look like a Sunday picnic.

theeconomiccollapseblog.com/archives/...

NoRiskAtAll
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Don’t Worry, Be Happy: Unemployment Is Down, The Stock Market Is Up And The Economy Is Going To Be Just Fine

The greatest days for the U.S. economy are just around the corner. So don't worry, be happy.

endoftheamericandream.com/archives/do...
NoRiskAtAll
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Global financial markets still not fully discounting oil price risk

You can only wonder where global equities will go when high oil prices are fully discounted, and interest rates go up to counter the inevitable inflation that comes with high oil prices.

www.arabianmoney.net/gold-silver/2011...
NoRiskAtAll
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Bernanke’s Unstoppable, Self Reinforcing Feedback-Loop---Our economic death spiral into the Second Great Depression

unveilingtheeconomy.blogspot.com/2011...
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March 6 (Bloomberg) -- China will target inflation as the top economic priority this year and narrow the gap between rich and poor as the government seeks to maintain social stability, Premier Wen Jiabao told lawmakers in Beijing.

“We cannot allow price rises to affect the normal lives of low-income people,” Wen said in his state-of-the-nation report to the annual meeting of the National People’s Congress yesterday. “We will reverse the trend of a widening income gap as soon as possible.”

laten we hopen dat de hotemototen er iets van bakken, anders gaat de wereldeconmie zeker en vast nog voor 2012 totaal smelten.
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High food prices to stay: IMF

World food prices are likely to persist, as it will take years for supply growth to respond to growing global demand, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said Thursday. Going forward, world may face increasing scarcity for land, water and energy, which are the most important inputs of food production, IMF said in its quarterly Finance & Development magazine. The IMF's food price index is now close to the previous spike in June 2008. Though a large part of the recent spike is related to temporary factors, such as weather, the main reasons for rising demand for food reflect structural changes in the global economy that will not be reversed, according to the analysis. The trend increase in food prices can be seen as a reflection, in part, of changing diet patterns of consumers in emerging and developing economies. Consumers in these countries are becoming richer and changing their diet to more high-protein foods such as meat, dairy products, edible oils, fruits and vegetables, and seafood, which are more ""income elastic"" than staple grains, the report said.

The unexpected spike in oil prices, triggered by political unrest in the Middle East, is also an indirect contributor to food inflation. High oil prices and policy support have boosted demand for bio-fuels, which in turn, increased demand for feedstock crops. Fuel is also used in all stages of the agricultural production cycle, from sowing to harvesting to distribution, it said. Another main factor is adverse weather conditions across the globe. Floods in Australia, Pakistan, and parts of India have helped push up the cost of food, as have droughts in China, Argentina, and Eastern Europe. At the same time, energy prices are again on the rise, with likely knock-on effects for food. The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations on Thursday said that its food price index averaged 236 points in February, the highest record since FAO started monitoring prices in 1990.

www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/fandd/20...
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Coffee?still full of beans amid 34-year high
By Javier Blas, Commodities Editor

Published: February 22 2011 18:28 | Last updated: February 22 2011 18:28

Coffee roasters used to sit down once a year with retailers to discuss prices. On rare occasions, they sat down twice a year. They are currently holding price discussions almost once a month as wholesale costs spiral.

“I have never seen anything similar in my 25-year career,” says a senior executive.

The cost of Arabica coffee – the high-quality bean appreciated by espresso connoisseurs, has risen to a 34-year high amid a global shortage. During the past 12 months, the cost has surged 145 per cent.

Roasters have responded with a string of retail price increases that have not dented consumption growth, industry executives say. JM Smucker Co, the US company behind the Folgers coffee brand that is seen as the trendsetter in the sector, has raised retail prices three times during the past year.

Last week, it warned that it could increase prices again this quarter if wholesale prices did not fall soon.

EDITOR’S CHOICE
Coffee squeeze set to push price higher - Feb-22.Cotton traders and US farmers clash - Feb-21.Rising food prices provide a heady harvest - Feb-18.The trend: Filter coffee - Feb-18.Brazil opposes commodity price controls - Feb-15.In depth: Food prices - Feb-17..Kona Haque, soft commodities analyst at Macquarie in London, says roasters are still not adequately covered and “remain a supportive factor to the rally as they keep buying on dips”. Some traders blame roasters seeking to buy forward supplies and fix prices for the most recent jump in prices.

On the New York ICE, the benchmark May contract surged on Tuesday to $2.784 per pound, the highest since prices hit an all-time high above $3.40 per pound in 1977 after a deep frost destroyed the crop of Brazil two years earlier.

“Next target is $3 per pound,” says a hedge fund manager. But others, including some commodities hedge funds, believe that after the strong rally it is time to take profits.

For years Arabica coffee has been a sleepy niche commodity market, largely handled by roasters such as Nestlé and trading houses, including the Neumann Kaffee Gruppe, in Hamburg, and Volcafe, based in Switzerland. But lately even investors such as pension funds have gained exposure through popular commodities indices such as the S&P GSCI.

The arrival of financial investors has prompted some consumers to complain about speculators. But by and large, roasters, traders and brokers point fingers at the physical market, where a shortage of premium beans is pushing prices sharply higher.

“The continued strength of physical differentials indicates this is very much a physically driven rally,” says James Hearn of brokerage Marex in London.

Food prices

FT In depth: News, comment and analysis on rising concerns about food security and prices
..Unlike the previous four big rallies of the coffee market – in 1975-77, 1985-86, 1994 and 1997, which were triggered after frost hit Brazil’s coffee belt, the current high level has a broader cause. Supplies are struggling in a wider number of countries, while demand is keeping pace. As a result, stocks have fallen to their lowest levels since the International Coffee Organisation started tracking them in the 1960s.

Over the past three years the main driver of the rally has been Colombia, which has suffered a string of bad crops, partly because of heavy rains.

The country’s output plunged to a 33-year low of 7.8m bags, each of 60kg, two years ago. The market was betting that supplies would rise to 10m bags in 2011. But traders have scaled down their forecast to about 8.5m-9.0m bags and some fear it could fall back to the poor levels of 2009.

Mexico has also suffered a bad crop this year because of low temperatures and the world’s largest coffee producer, Brazil, has been causing worries in the market of late.

Traditionally, coffee futures in New York, which track the cost of the top quality washed Arabica, trade above the local BM&FBovespa market in São Paulo.

But domestic Brazilian prices for so-called finer semi-washed Arabicas have surged above those of New York for the first time since the 1990s, a sign that the country’s crop is not nearly as large as previously thought, traders and brokers say.

With stocks at their lowest levels in half a century, the market can ill-afford another supply surprise. Even if prices drop over the short term, as some hedge fund managers believe, the outlook for the next 12-18 months is fairly bullish, they say, as Brazil’s output will drop next year due to the biennial cycle of Arabica coffee production, where an “on” year follows an “off” year, further tightening the global market.
Robin82
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quote:

Mon-E-Man schreef:

'Olieprijs kan oplopen tot 250 dollar'

www.nu.nl/economie/2461252/olieprijs-...
Recessie drijgt in mijn optiek al als de huidige niveau's tot ca juli/agustus 2011 aanhouden (ca Euro 100,- het vat).
Van een economische teruggang zal nu al sprake zijn, alleenkomen deze (negatuieve) cjfers pas over ca 2-3 maanden uit.
De eerste kwartaalcijfers van 2011 zullen een stuk minder zijn voor veel bedrijven vergeleken met die van (eind)2010 toen alle seinen nog op (fel)groen stonden.
Het vertrouwen was weer gestegen, ondernemers, beleggers hadden er weer zin in, aangemoeidgd door de goed presterende beurskoersen, er was weer geloof en nu hoofdzakelijk door de onruat in het Midden-Oosten, recordprijzen bij het tankstation, duurdere boodschappen, verzekeringen etc blijkt dat veel mensen er gewoon weer een stuk op achteruit zijn gegaan.

Heb zelf E 50,- als inflatiecorrectie ontvangen, had deze liever niet gehad als de prijzen gelijk waren gebleven aan 2010. Mijn (vaste) kosten zijn met bijna 100,- netto gestegen.

Denk aan:

gas, water en electra
zorgkosten
duurdere brandstofkosten
duurdere boodschappen

dan heb ik het nog niet over gestegen horeca prijzen, duurdere entreeprijzen van festivals, theaters etc.

Wat je netto kunt uitgeven wordt steeds minder voor de gemiddelde Nederlander, wil je op hetzelfde peil blijven uitgeven dan moet je gaan lenen en wanneer je dit te vaak en teveel doet dan belan je in de schulden.

Kijk maar om je heen:wie heeft met eigen geld in de straat een nieuwe auto gekocht?
Dat is denk ik nog geen 20% meer, de rest heeft hiervoor moeten lenen. Dat komt omdat het netto besteedbaar inkomen na het betalen van alle rekeningen zodanig klein is geworden dat je hiervan geen nieuwe auto meer mee kunt betalen/ bij elkaar sparen.
Dus je hebt de keuze:een tweedehands of een nieuwe lenen en helaas gebeurt dat laatste te vaak waardoor teveel mensen in de problemen raken.

Min conlusie is dan ook dat ondanks we het in Nederland nog goed hebben, we als gemiddelde Nederlander wel jaarlijks er op achteruit gaan.

Als we allemaal alleen dat geen uitgeven wat we uit te geven hebben dan betekent dit dat de economie er zeer voor staat, een recessie is dan logisch maar biedt dan ook kansen:prijzen worden weer aangepast aan normale niveau's.
De horeca ondernemeer, de bakker , de slager krijgr dan plaats van 2 euro voor zijn brood dan maar bijv. 1,50 weer maar kan dan ook weer een leuke middenklasser kopen voor 12.500 welke nu 20.000 kost.
Mensen zouden dan ook weer vaker en langer in een café gaan zitten,nu blijven de meeste hooguit 2 uurtjes en zijn dan weer weg omdat ze voor hun budget vaak maar 1 rondje kunnen geven waar dat voor 10 jaar terug er nog 2 waren.
Terwijl het inkomen van diezelfde horeca gast maar met 20% is gestegen in 10 jaar tijd...
(dit geldt ook voor andere branches zoals de fritures.
Deze zijn in 10 jaar tijd ook verdubbeld met de prijzen.
Het gevolg is dat mensen nu weer meer zelf gaan bakken en de omzet uit nog minder mensen gehaald moeten worden.
Bij ons in het dorp liggen 4! fritures, over 1 a 2 jaar vermoedelijk nog maar 2. Toen de euro kwam deed ik bezorgen, 's weekends met 2 auto's en soms moest een derde bijspringen,nu hebben ze voor het weekend 1 bezorger en soms een tweede.
Logisch ook als dezelfde portie frites met 100% is gestegen in 10 jaar tijd en de lonen maar gemiddeld 20% zijn gestegen, maar gelukkig bezorg ik niet meer!
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As US Prepares To Tap Strategic Oil Reserve, Crude Prices To Surge On Asian Disaster Preparation is.gd/YpIlLM


Ierse coalitie waarschuwt voor onhoudbaarheid schuldenlast: 15:27 Tien dagen na de Ierse stembusgang zijn de lei... bit.ly/gBAF3s

Here's why the stock market is screwed... read.bi/gJzOJg

“This is why you have Revolution. The governments are out of money and they’re trying to lean on the people through t.. bit.ly/ghqsjS

NoRiskAtAll
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After historic gains, are stocks nearing a bubble?
As historic bull market nears its second birthday, some investors wonder about a bubble

Sunday March 6, 2011, 5:03 pm EST

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke fielded the usual questions about inflation, tax cuts and government debt during a trip to Congress last week. Then a new question popped up: Is the Fed creating another bubble in stock prices?

Bernanke told the Senate Banking Committee he saw "little evidence" that was happening. But he cautioned: "Of course, nobody can know for sure."

That's the problem with bubbles. You only know you're in one when it pops.

This week is the second anniversary of the bull market that followed the financial meltdown. The Standard & Poor's 500-stock index is in its fastest climb since 1955, doubling since the market bottomed on March 9, 2009. In January and February alone, it's up 5.5 percent, the best start to a year since 1998.

Stock bubbles are famously hard to define. In 1999, for instance, investors thought it was perfectly rational to pay 62 times a company's earnings per share for a technology stock because it seemed dot-com companies couldn't lose. They only realized their error when many of those companies turned out to be nothing more than slick marketing ploys.

After two bubbles in the past 10 years -- tech stocks and real estate -- investors are suspicious of consistent gains that seem too good to be true. Some worry that the Fed's dramatic measures to pump up the economy mean the market's gains are an illusion. But a range of measurements suggest the market isn't in the midst of a bubble now. Instead, the stock market may simply be back to normal.

"The last two years were the great giveaway," says Stephen Lieber, the chief investment officer responsible for $6 billion in assets at Alpine Mutual Funds. Stocks had fallen so low during the panic that anyone who bought stocks on March 9, 2009, received a once-in-a-lifetime deal, he says. Caterpillar Inc., for instance, closed below $24 that day. It's now above $100.

While stock prices are much higher than they were two years ago, Bob Doll, market strategist for asset-management giant BlackRock, says investors aren't irrationally optimistic.

"Bubbles occur when there are high valuations, evidence of lots of borrowing to lever up to buy something," he says. "When I look around the landscape I have a hard time finding anything that looks like that."

One sign of a bubble would be if stocks rose far beyond what's normal by historical standards, says Bill Stone, chief investment strategist at PNC Asset Management Group. By that measure, it's not happening yet. According to Stone's research, since 1928, the average bull market runs almost five years and gains 164 percent. By comparison, this bull market has barely hit middle age.

The fundamentals of the stock market don't suggest a bubble, either. The S&P 500 index now trades at 17.4 times the earnings of its stocks over the past year. In March 1999, during the tech bubble, the multiple was 30.6.

Corporations are expected to make record profits this year and have enough cash -- $2 trillion -- to pay bigger dividends and start buying back shares of stock, both of which make stocks more valuable.

"Corporate balance sheets haven't been in better shape over the last 200 years, period," says Joe Davis, the chief economist at fund giant Vanguard.

And there's no ignoring the economic recovery. The economy was shrinking at almost a 5 percent annual rate when stocks bottomed in 2009. Now it's growing at almost a 3 percent pace. Businesses added 222,000 jobs in February, the most since April 2010, and unemployment has fallen almost a full percentage point in three months.

"The economy is absolutely justifying what is happening in the stock market," says Liz Ann Sonders, an investment strategist at Charles Schwab.

Some investors say there isn't a bubble yet but worry that the market is in the first stages of inflating one. Rob Arnott, the founder of investment firm Research Affliates, thinks the stock market is "dangerously" overpriced. He points to Apple, which has a $321 billion market value, making it the second-largest company in the world behind Exxon Mobil. By revenue, profits or payouts to investors, however, Apple fails to crack the top 20, Arnott says.

"They have wonderful products and a finger on the pulse of the consumer like nobody else," Arnott says. "But the second-largest on the planet must mean Apple is the second-largest source of profits. Boy, that's a stretch."

Judged by other measures of value, the companies that make up the S&P 500 look rich. Investors are paying 24 times inflation-adjusted earnings over the last decade. The historical average is 16. That ratio could climb if people push stock prices higher because they expect earnings to catch up. But Arnott believes people are already underestimating larger problems ahead. The U.S. government's $14 trillion in debt and a greater share of the work force hitting retirement are both bound to drag down economic growth. "That's quite a hurricane," he says.

Legendary investor Jeremy Grantham, chief investment strategist of GMO, has a knack for timing. In a letter to investors released in early March 2009, Grantham argued it was impossible to declare a bottom in the stock market but said its steep drop was reason enough to jump back in. He predicted that the combined efforts of the Fed and government spending would spur a stock rally "far in excess of anything justified by either long-term or short-term fundamentals."

Grantham remains a critic of the Fed's stimulus program but isn't willing to say stocks have reached bubble territory. At least not yet. If the S&P 500, at 1,321 on Friday, climbs to 1,500 by October, then watch out. At that point, he says, "it will be a market looking for an excuse to go. On the first piece of really bad news, it will make a determined effort to tank."

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www.rtl.nl/(/financien/rtlz/nieuws/)/...

Een oude zilveren gulden doet nu meer dan een moderne metalen euro, hoe vreemd ook!*

De zilveren knaken/guldens nu in plastic AH-tassen naar de postzegel en muntenmarkt(wo/za) op het Spui brengen? wachten=geld verdienen.

*Probeer jezelf maar eens in te halen op de snelweg ...
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Ook bij een scenario waar alles blijft aanslepen hebben we geen belang. De grootse vrees van de analisten is een zogenaamd "rocket and feather-effect, waarbij, zoals nu aan het gebeuren is, de olieprijs pijlsnel (als een raket) stijgt, maar slechts heel langzaam (als een dalend veertje) weer zakt. Dat zou ons volgens de meeste analisten zonder twijfel in een nieuwe recessie doen belanden. (CBR)
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