[kj] OT -- 9%... 10%...
sade1
saulomar1 at yahoo.com
Sat Feb 12 21:23:22 EST 2011
> ..innovate and create. Then the rest will surf on your coat tails.
But K.J. has done that and they're still not rich!
________________________________
From: Rob Moss <rob.moss at gmx.com>
To: A list about all things Killing Joke (the band!) <gathering at misera.net>
Sent: Sat, February 12, 2011 4:05:42 PM
Subject: Re: [kj] OT -- 9%... 10%...
Yes. But who gets rich?
Then fund managers and a pathetic amount is passed to investors. I am a victim.
The true way to get rich is to innovate and create. Then the rest will surf on
your coat tails.
On 12 Feb 2011, at 23:40, Brendan Quinn <bq at soundgardener.co.nz> wrote:
I worked in the banking industry for 5+ years, commercial banking for about 2
years, then trading floors for 3 +. During that time I witnessed the
Econopocalypse firsthand; the events leading up to it, and the aftermath. I
ended up working on the largest trading floor in the southern hemisphere, at a
large investment firm that was one of those financial supermarkets – currency,
equities, debt (huge dept!), private wealth management, m&a, infrastructure, you
name it, they did it, 24 hours a day, 5 days a week. I rotated across all shifts
so I got to see the activity of the market around the clock, talked to bankers
all day long, CNBC / FOX was constantly on up on the plasma screens, I got the
subscription newsletters they get from the financial shills, I read the analysis
they sent out to their clients every day, and when I had downtime on night-shift
I did my own research. I supported all of their trading platforms – Reuters,
Bloomberg, EBS, and any number of proprietary systems from order entry to
settlements. I used to find finance an absolute bore but after getting some
exposure to it I find it fascinating - mainly the big picture, not the details.
>
>So my initial interest was watching what was going on in the banking world, and
>comparing it to what I was reading in the generally underground press. I won’t
>comment too much on the difference between the two, suffice to say I never once
>spoke to anyone in banking in that time who understood how money is created via
>private central banks and the fractional reserve system. In fact I was once
>ridiculed for mentioning it, which I was able to quash with a single Wikipedia
>link…
>
>These days I continue to read the business news online - mainly to check the
>market figures, not for analysis.
>I go to www.seekingalpha.com – and filter out what I think are the decent
>contributors. Often the comments section is better than the articles.
>
>
>In terms of individuals there’s a few and they change from time to time, in no
>real order but I give the top two a fair bit of credence atm:
>
>Gerald Celente
>
>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JhaEc_4zuFI&feature=related
>
>JS Kim (subscription fee to his newsletter is priced against the spot price of
>gold)
>
>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W_FbKvZ4yRc&feature=related
>
>Jim Rogers
>Max Kaiser
>Peter Schiff
>Ron Paul (the last two only re economics, not politics)
>Gareth Morgan (NZ)
>Jim Rickards
>James Turk
>Mike Malone
>Was paying attention to Roubini but not so much anymore
>Alex Jones but largely for a laugh
>Kiyosaki – trying to suss him out at the moment…unsure.
>
>Basically my criteria is people with a track record of being right more often
>than not, and who understand the big picture.
>
>
>Bear in mind I could have this totally wrong – but the consequences for that are
>actually pretty good – no collapse, no high unemployment, no food shortages,
>wars, etc. So scenario one I hopefully prepare for and hedge against disaster,
>scenario two there is no disaster and markets recover and everyone prospers.
>There’s certainly a chance of that with Asia doing so well, and the chance that
>we’ll discover abundant clean energy just around the corner which will change
>everything. Just on the current trajectory it looks nasty to me so I’m hedging
>my bets and staying out of cash, bonds and equities, only in hard assets.
>
>
>From:gathering-bounces at misera.net [mailto:gathering-bounces at misera.net] On
>Behalf Of sade1
>Sent: Sunday, 13 February 2011 8:38 a.m.
>To: A list about all things Killing Joke (the band!)
>Subject: Re: [kj] OT -- 9%... 10%...
>
>Where do you turn to for info.? what
>websites/books/paid-informants/covert-operatives,etc. do you turn to regularly?
>
>
>
>
________________________________
>From:Brendan Quinn <bq at soundgardener.co.nz>
>To: A list about all things Killing Joke (the band!) <gathering at misera.net>
>Sent: Thu, February 10, 2011 10:04:29 PM
>Subject: Re: [kj] OT -- 9%... 10%...
>stocks are the only way nowadays to make any money.
>
>Here’s a few facts:
>
>· Money invested in the sharemarket from 2000, to now – made 0 %.
>Diversification / index tracking (Wall St mantras) didn’t help one iota. Gold
>made over 350% in that timeframe. USD lost half it’s value.
>
>
>· Silver was up 82% last year. Commodities had a huge year. Almost
>everything did well, when valued in dollar terms…because the dollars are
>multiplying and have to go somewhere (if they languish in bank accounts
>collecting 1.5% interest, they are going backwards)
>
>· If you had $1M in 2008, and copped a 50% hit, like most of the free
>world, you were left with $500K. If you have made 100% since then, you’re up to
>$750K (valued in dollars of less value due to inflation). Losses hit much harder
>than gains. “Manage the losses and the gains will take care of themselves”.
>
>
>· Something like 70-80% of money managers fail to make the market
>average.
>
>
>Bankers love currencies, equities, derivatives, (mis)managing money for people,
>and make nothing from gold and silver. What’s done better in the last 10 years?
>Representations of assets, or hard assets? One is managed by the bankers, the
>other actually exists in the real world. Correlation?
>
>
>Every dollar invested in gold and silver is a dollar the crooks can’t screw
>management fees and commission on, generally for doing nothing other than
>investing in index funds. Gold and silver can’t be printed from thin air, they
>require hard work, knowledge and risk to extract. For all these reasons, bankers
>hate gold and silver (which are uniquely both commodities and money)
>
>Gold and silver have been used as money for far longer than paper. Long term,
>paper money and all fiat currency has always gone to 0%. Metals have retained
>their value for thousands of years. There is a finite supply of metals (and most
>commodities), there is no limit to how much currency can be printed. I you don’t
>believe me, feel free to bid on this ebay auction for 100 50 trillion dollar
>Zimbabwe notes:
>
>
>Every time precious metals have dipped in the last 10 years of secular bull
>market, the Wall St talking heads have proclaimed BUBBLE. The price of PMs has
>been manipulated down for decades – the genie is starting to come out of the
>bottle, hence he last 10 years results.
>
>
>From:gathering-bounces at misera.net [mailto:gathering-bounces at misera.net] On
>Behalf Of sade1
>Sent: Friday, 11 February 2011 5:37 p.m.
>To: A list about all things Killing Joke (the band!)
>Subject: Re: [kj] OT -- 9%... 10%...
>
>> .. the retail investor has fled (finally learned some sense).
>
>What kind of trouble lurks for the retail investor? I'm running a small fund
>(online) for a couple of elderly relatives and I've gotten 87% return in 10
>months without anything weird happening or any other "things that go bump in the
>night". Should I expect a knock at my door (or a second cursor on my computer
>screen)? It seems around here, stocks are the only way nowadays to make any
>money.
>
>
>
________________________________
>From:Brendan Quinn <bq at soundgardener.co.nz>
>To: A list about all things Killing Joke (the band!) <gathering at misera.net>
>Sent: Thu, February 10, 2011 7:44:58 PM
>Subject: Re: [kj] OT -- 9%... 10%...
>And that's with Corporate America sitting on a liquid $2Trillion in cash
>
>Re US economy:
>
>Cash - massive Ponzi scheme, every year it’s worth less and less. >>From 2000 to
>2008 USD lost 50% of its buying power.
>
>Bonds – what’s worse, holding US dollars now, or pieces of paper that promise US
>Dollars in 30 years time? No thanks. (USD depreciated 41% vs AUD last year)
>
>
>Shares – totally manipulated, most trades are now done by computers, the retail
>investor has fled (finally learned some sense). A few banks last year had 60
>straight days up in trading – statistically close to impossible amid the
>volatility at the moment. The markets are rigged.
>
> Google – “dark pools” “high frequency trading” “SEC fines JPM” “SEC
>fines Goldman”
>
>Hard physical assets are where to park your money. Almost anything to do with
>the financial representation of actual assets is tainted.
>
>American banks aren’t using mark to market for bank ‘assets’ – if they were half
>of them would be under water. $2T in cash is irrelevant when the other side of
>the balance sheet is make believe (and the consumer, esp middle class, is
>stuffed)
>
>An economy that can’t add jobs after 2 years of 0% interest is pretty much
>fucked.
>
>US is waging massive currency war and complaining that others are. China is
>actually raising interest rates, raising the value of the Yuan, and encouraging
>people (via television ads) to buy physical gold and silver. What’s Obama and co
>doing…? Printing money, debasing the currency.
>
>Chinese saving rate > 30%. US saving rate 1%
>
>“BELIEVE IN CHANGE”
>
>Good luck with that.
>
>/rant
>
>From:gathering-bounces at misera.net [mailto:gathering-bounces at misera.net] On
>Behalf Of sade1
>Sent: Friday, 11 February 2011 4:21 p.m.
>To: Gathering
>Subject: [kj] OT -- 9%... 10%...
>
>So here it is again from the horses' mouths. At the highest level they are
>saying now that unemployment won't come down to a near(-but-still-high)-normal
>5% for another 10 years, with 6 years being the Optimists' view. And that's with
>Corporate America sitting on a liquid $2Trillion in cash = 50 million people
>working for a year. They'd rather buy back their own stock (to keep the gains
>and dividends in-house) than to put a commoner to work.
>9% Unemployment Just
>Finehttp://us.mg4.mail.yahoo.com/dc/launch?.gx=1&.rand=5fgqj6vg891ik
>And,
>http://news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_exclusive/20110209/pl_yblog_exclusive/why-is-the-jobless-rate-staying-so-high-and-what-can-be-done-about-it
>
>
>10% of the land is The Hand
>that pulls the strings...
>to have, to own, to hold:
> money, property, assets - before lives
>
>Green gestures..an endless debate
>Why? Just to justify,
> jus-ti-justify..this 'Utopia':
> "Money is our business
> Cash is our business
> These derivatives is our
>business
> Lies! are our business
> Business is our
>Business!!"
>
>
>
>
________________________________
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>in 45,000 destinations on Yahoo! Travel to find your fit.
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