Don't WAIT!

Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Bits and Pieces in Dinarland Wednesday Afternoon

Dinar Updates:

Firefly:  Contrary to popular belief ...They will NEVER hold a press conference to announce the RI/RV!  They will announce events that should indicate that something is up.   

So far the 3 laws I'm looking for have NOT been IMPLEMENTED...yet. 

The most important of the 3 IMO is the anti-money laundering law.  Tariff Law IMO will be AFTER the fact. Border Tariffs! Investment Law is crucial as well.  Those 3 effect the Global economy.

Yes many laws are still needing implementation for the nation of Iraq but not for the monetary reform. 

HCL is very much needed for IRAQ!  Could it be put off? Of course it can...for much longer?  IMO...heck no! 

IMO it will be a "Domino Effect". 
....
Yes, we are definitely in the moment of a historic event. 

STOP looking for dates and windows...

Timing my friends...TIMING!

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Landa Global CC Today:8-26-15

Landa Global has been hosting a dial-in conference to inform holders of assets and intermediaries of the current status of the historic bond redemptions, and general information in respect of procedures and pricings of assets.

To access the weekly conference, please observe the following information: 

Date:  Each Wednesday
Time: 4:00 p.m. CST (USA)


Conference Number:   641-715-3580
Access Code:   484-959#

International:
   See international call numbers below. Access code is the same as above.

http://ift.tt/1bfWr1Y

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KTFA:

The Website has been un-available all day…..Must be having technical or website problems?
TNT:

SassyD : CNN Money: $2.1 trillion erased from U.S. stocks in 6 days –

What the heck is going on with stocks?

The American stock market has surrendered a stunning $2.1 trillion of value in just the last six days of market chaos.

The enormous losses reflect the deep fears gripping markets about how the world economy will fare amid a deepening economic slowdown in China.

The Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq have all tumbled into correction territory, their first such 10% decline from a recent high since 2011.

The S&P 500 -- the best barometer for the biggest U.S. companies -- has lost trillions of market value, according to S&P Dow Jones Indices.

To put those losses into perspective, that's roughly equal to the combined market value of these corporate titans put together: Apple (AAPL, Tech30), Google (GOOGL, Tech30), Berkshire Hathaway (BRKA), ExxonMobil (XOM), Facebook (FB, Tech30), Walmart (WMT) and 21st Century Fox (FOXA).

Here's another way to look at it: It's like erasing almost the entire value of the British version of the S&P 500. Known as the S&P BMI U.K. Index, it is worth just $2.8 trillion.

"The current stock market selloff has spurred flashbacks for previous financial crises," Merrill Lynch chief investment officer Christopher Hyzy wrote in a research report on Tuesday.

2014, 2015 gains wiped out

The heart stopping part of of the market slide occurred on Monday, with the Dow's unprecedented 1,089-point decline just minutes after the opening bell.

The recent turmoil has wiped out not only 2015's stock market gains but nearly all of 2014's as well. The Dow ended Tuesday at the lowest level since February 2014.

The dramatic retreat on Wall Street has been fueled by serious concerns about the fallout of China's economic slowdown. While everyone already knew China's economy was no longer enjoying explosive growth, investors have seized on possible new signs the slowdown is more serious.

China's market shocks, economy questions


China's stock market imploded earlier in the summer. It wasn't clear if it was simply the bursting of a stock market bubble or a red flag about deeper issues in China's economy.

And then China shocked markets by devaluing its currency, the yuan, on August 11. The move smacked some as a desperate attempt to boost exports by making its goods cheaper to foreign buyers.

Fears deepened last week when a key gauge of Chinese manufacturing activity plummeted to the lowest level since the global financial crisis. All of this has had the combined effect of sending the Chinese stock market down over 40% just in the last two months.

Is the selloff warranted?

But do these credible concerns about China's economy justify the huge selloff on Wall Street? And are further large losses in the cards?

Merrill Lynch argues that U.S. equities "remain vulnerable" in the near term because stocks have broken down below several key levels and momentum stocks are tumbling.

Yet unlike the stock market, the American economy is not tanking. Just on Wednesday Barclays boosted its tracking estimate of third-quarter gross domestic growth to 2.8%. That's nowhere near a recession. In the current environment of lackluster global economic growth, that actually qualifies as pretty strong.

And it's not like interest rates are shooting higher, creating a drag on stocks. Central bankers around the world are flooding the system with cash and keeping rates extremely low. Bill Dudley, the president of the New York Federal Reserve, signaled the U.S. central bank may shelve its plans to raise rates next month until later in the year or even 2016.

"The positive fundamentals of improving economic growth and accommodative monetary policies in developed markets remain intact, supporting equities over bonds," Merrill Lynch wrote.

If the economy isn't collapsing, then that means corporate profits should remain relatively solid, outside of the oil-ravaged energy sector. Profits are critical to stock prices.

Is now the time to bargain hunt?

But prices have tumbled in recent days, seemingly undercutting the argument that American stocks are too expensive.

Just look at the Dow's price-to-earnings ratio, a key valuation metric. On average Dow stocks now trade for 15.5 times this year's expected earnings and only 14 times next year's, according to ConvergEx. While that's not exactly dirt cheap, it's a big improvement from multiples north of 18 just a few months ago.

And if the markets go even lower in the current volatility "we're getting to levels where the fundamentals show compelling value," said Nicholas Colas, chief market strategist at ConvergEx, in a note.

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SassyD :  NY Fed: September rate hike 'less compelling' now --

http://ift.tt/1Lx4h55

JWT43333:   U S A national debt by year - interesting -

http://ift.tt/1i2nRfP


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