Originally posted by Andy2
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Traders go short on Lloyds
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I love these kinds of threads. It always makes me smile when AtW makes himself look like a complete retardǝןqqıʍComment
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I agree with AtW.
Effectively the banks are gambling money they don't have and when it goes their way they pay themselves the profits, when it all goes to tulip, they crawl to the tax payer for handouts.
Something has to change.
It's all very well speculators pushing the oil price up to $150 a barrel, but that means a crushing cost of living for everyone else.
The whole gambling environment has to be changed or else the crash around the corner is going to mean you lose your savings, your job, your home and your future.Comment
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Originally posted by Andy2 View PostOil price of $147 last year has proven to be a result of speculation by these guys
This activity has no economic purpose, in fact it is now happening on such a grand scale that it is affecting normal economy to a very serious degree - why would proper business take risks hiring people, trying to invent new stuff, build it, market it, when instead it can just fire everyone, buy remote trading monitor and gamble on stock market?
As I said I don't mind gamblers who use their own money and do it in their own separate place that is completely isolated from everyone else - this is not the case with stock market right now.Comment
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Originally posted by DimPrawn View PostI agree with AtW.
Effectively the banks are gambling money they don't have and when it goes their way they pay themselves the profits, when it all goes to tulip, they crawl to the tax payer for handouts.
Something has to change.
It's all very well speculators pushing the oil price up to $150 a barrel, but that means a crushing cost of living for everyone else.
The whole gambling environment has to be changed or else the crash around the corner is going to mean you lose your savings, your job, your home and your future.
This crisis has it roots in the dotcom bust, and the fed lowering interest rates and making it too easy for people to get mortgages they couldn't' afford, then banks wrapping up these debts in securities, CDO's etc and the credit rating agencies being too much in the pockets of the banks etc.
No one is blaming shorting stocks, and not all bankers are to blame - - it was a subset that fcked it up for everyone, and governments are partially to blame for easing regulations and lowering interest rayes too much etc.
There's more, but that's the essence of it.
Not buying and selling shares, or shorting them or whatever. No one at any point is blaming this as the cause of the downturn.
FFS.Hang on - there is actually a place called Cheddar?? - cailin maith
Any forum is a collection of assorted weirdos, cranks and pervs - Board Game Geek
That will be a simply fab time to catch up for a beer. - Tay
Have you ever seen somebody lick the chutney spoon in an Indian Restaurant and put it back ? - CyberghoulComment
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Originally posted by DimPrawn View PostI agree with AtW.
Effectively the banks are gambling money they don't have and when it goes their way they pay themselves the profits, when it all goes to tulip, they crawl to the tax payer for handouts.
Something has to change.
It's all very well speculators pushing the oil price up to $150 a barrel, but that means a crushing cost of living for everyone else.
The whole gambling environment has to be changed or else the crash around the corner is going to mean you lose your savings, your job, your home and your future.
Hope your kebab shop does well.Hard Brexit now!
#prayfornodealComment
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Originally posted by AtW View PostIt's going up to $100 again from $30 earlier this year - main reason is anti-competitive action by OPEC, and then speculators who hire supertankers to stockpile oil intending to sell it later at higher price as they buy forward contracts.
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/to...cle6891259.ece
Opec, the oil producers’ cartel, has said that it may increase oil production this year if prices continue to rise.
José Botelho de Vasconcelos, the Angolan Oil Minister who is the present president of Opec, said that oil prices of between $75 and $80 per barrel were at an optimum level for both consumers and producers.
However, he said that any further rise towards $100 per barrel threatened to sabotage the nascent global economic recovery. “I think a balanced price is always better. You know that, if necessary, some countries are open to injecting more oil into the market and that will be done . . . We need to maintain the balance.”Hang on - there is actually a place called Cheddar?? - cailin maith
Any forum is a collection of assorted weirdos, cranks and pervs - Board Game Geek
That will be a simply fab time to catch up for a beer. - Tay
Have you ever seen somebody lick the chutney spoon in an Indian Restaurant and put it back ? - CyberghoulComment
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I love the way Opec have sold the concept of $80 a barrel being a "reasonable" price.
Before the bubble, $40 a barrel was considered expensive.Comment
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Originally posted by sasguru View PostYou're almost as ignorant as AtW when it comes to financial stuff.
Hope your kebab shop does well.
Comment
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Originally posted by DimPrawn View PostI love the way Opec have sold the concept of $80 a barrel being a "reasonable" price.
Before the bubble, $40 a barrel was considered expensive.
FFS. Are we really this ignorant?Hang on - there is actually a place called Cheddar?? - cailin maith
Any forum is a collection of assorted weirdos, cranks and pervs - Board Game Geek
That will be a simply fab time to catch up for a beer. - Tay
Have you ever seen somebody lick the chutney spoon in an Indian Restaurant and put it back ? - CyberghoulComment
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