or we could actually look at the data: http://www.bls.gov/cpi/Anonymous wrote:^^^^ gas , groceries and commodities are up 7% a year. That's highly inflationary halving the dollar in 10 years.
We should see at least a hint of it before panicking.Anonymous wrote:Right now...
Anonymous wrote:I have a friend in CT who's a very adept money manager. He told me last year this would happen and said don't be fooled by it. He hasn't bee wrong yet.
Would be stupid to be short-sighted. Printing money and pumping it into the market is just that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^^ bs. The fed prints money... Gives it to banks at 0 percent so the banks will buy bonds and finance our trillion per year deficit. Why doesn't the fed just print money and pay our bills you ask? Because then it would be obvious that money itself has been compromised.
You keep saying the same things over and over. Maybe you should actually bring information to persuade people. Your daily diatribe isn't converting people here.
Anonymous wrote:^^^ bs. The fed prints money... Gives it to banks at 0 percent so the banks will buy bonds and finance our trillion per year deficit. Why doesn't the fed just print money and pay our bills you ask? Because then it would be obvious that money itself has been compromised.
Dow's 7-day winning streak is longest in nearly a year
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/us-stock-indexes-in-mild-retreat-2013-03-11?dist=afterbell
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The reason the Dow is even close to where it was 6 years ago is money printing and artificial low rates. There is nowhere else to put money. When rates rise everything will collapse. Bonds/ stocks and the gov can't afford the interest. Money printing is here to stay until the dollar collapses.
Can you point to any articles discussing "money printing" in the last couple of years?
Note: I'm not suggesting that there has or hasn't been money printing, by which I assume you mean the Fed or whoever is responsible authorizing new currency. I really don't know one way or the other and I'm genuinely interested to learn about this subject.