USA am Ende oder am Anfang


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Eröffnet am:19.11.09 17:14von: HotSalsaAnzahl Beiträge:120
Neuester Beitrag:25.04.21 10:35von: SandraznolaLeser gesamt:19.356
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4159 Postings, 5855 Tage HotSalsaUSA am Ende oder am Anfang

 
  
    #1
5
19.11.09 17:14
Nachdem es hier keinen Thread gab, möchte ich nun einen eröffnen, da die Konsolidierung hier ziemlich lange angedauert hat. Ich glaube, das Amiland macht zur Zeit gerade eine schwere Zeit durch. Da der Dollar ziemlich gefallen ist, wird es wieder für eine Gegenbewegung im nächsten Jahr Zeit. Die Exporte sollten Rekordgewinne in den Vereingten Staaten erwarten lassen. Nicht umsonst wettet auch Buffet auf die amerikanische Wirtschaft.

Hier ein Ausblick:

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/...ries&pos=6&asset=&ccode=  

17202 Postings, 6328 Tage MinespecBuffy wettet

 
  
    #2
19.11.09 17:15
ich geh mit. Vorsichtig ...erst mal in USD Cash dann später ab Mitte 2010 in US Aktien.  

35553 Postings, 5823 Tage DacapoWie oft muß ich es noch sagen...USA ist fertig....

 
  
    #3
19.11.09 17:17

8210 Postings, 5707 Tage thai09wie solln das ablaufen, mit Amero

 
  
    #4
1
19.11.09 17:18

4159 Postings, 5855 Tage HotSalsaUS Verbrauchervertrauen zieht wieder an

 
  
    #6
24.11.09 17:40

342 Postings, 5604 Tage groundinspectorob die amy pleite sind oder nicht

 
  
    #7
25.11.09 22:25
das ist ohne belang...die machen einfach weiter....  

4159 Postings, 5855 Tage HotSalsaBusiness Activity in U.S.A.

 
  
    #8
30.11.09 17:50

1461 Postings, 6159 Tage MegamillionAmis sind fast durch, wenns aufgeht das wohlgemerk

 
  
    #9
30.11.09 17:52
t ziemlich riskante Spiel, dann kommen sie um eine Währungsreform rum und die Deppen sind die Europäer, das wird dann wirklich lustig..  

1461 Postings, 6159 Tage MegamillionErklärt auch die relative Schwäche des Dax zu Dow

 
  
    #10
01.12.09 09:37

4159 Postings, 5855 Tage HotSalsaJep

 
  
    #11
01.12.09 10:51
Die Carry Trades werden Dollar noch beflügeln und dann werden die USAler nur noch ihre eigenen Aktien kaufen.  

4159 Postings, 5855 Tage HotSalsaUS-Verbauchervertrauen steigt an

 
  
    #12
11.12.09 21:37

4159 Postings, 5855 Tage HotSalsaWir stehen am Anfang

 
  
    #13
17.12.09 19:26

4159 Postings, 5855 Tage HotSalsaFolgt nach der Krise der Durchbruch?

 
  
    #14
29.12.09 14:39

4159 Postings, 5855 Tage HotSalsaAnsätze für Optimismus

 
  
    #16
15.01.10 00:38

4159 Postings, 5855 Tage HotSalsaBIP um +5,4% im 4. Quartal 2009 gestiegen

 
  
    #17
29.01.10 14:53

4159 Postings, 5855 Tage HotSalsaKorrektur

 
  
    #18
29.01.10 15:40
+5,7% sollte es heißen  

4159 Postings, 5855 Tage HotSalsaPMI unerwartet stark angestiegen

 
  
    #19
1
01.02.10 19:56
Hier ist meiner Ansicht nach extremes Erholungspotential vorhanden :)))

http://www.ariva.de/news/...rwartet-stark-angestiegen-Nord-LB-3235600  

4159 Postings, 5855 Tage HotSalsaFrühindikator positiv

 
  
    #20
1
18.02.10 16:19

4159 Postings, 5855 Tage HotSalsaUS Wirtschaft wächst stärker als erwartet

 
  
    #21
26.02.10 15:11

4159 Postings, 5855 Tage HotSalsaUS-Gewerbeimmobilienmarkt stabilisiert sich

 
  
    #22
26.02.10 16:16

4159 Postings, 5855 Tage HotSalsaUS Verbrauchervertrauen trübt leicht ein

 
  
    #23
26.02.10 16:32

4159 Postings, 5855 Tage HotSalsaChicago Einkaufsmanagerindex steigt an

 
  
    #24
26.02.10 16:34

856 Postings, 5472 Tage RobinWThe recession is most certainly over

 
  
    #25
1
26.02.10 16:38
The recession is most certainly over. In fact, the more likely scenario is a boom.

Let me show you why with one simple indicator...

The indicator is the "yield curve." And it's saying there's definitely no risk of recession now.

The "yield curve" is a simple idea. A "normal" yield curve simply shows that if you want to borrow money for a year, the interest rate is lower than if you want to borrow money for 10 years. That's "normal" because it's riskier to lend someone money for 10 years than one year... so you demand a higher rate of interest for a 10-year loan.

Normally, the difference between long-term interest rates and short-term interest rates is about one percentage point. That's what it's averaged over the last 50 years. So when interest rates on 10-year government bonds are at 4%, as they are now, then interest rates on one-year bonds should be 3%.

So that's normal. But when the government – the Federal Reserve, actually – tries to steer the economy, it makes a mess of "normal." And when it does, recessions ALWAYS follow.

For example, if the Fed wanted to slow the economy down today, it would raise short-term interest rates over 4%. That would upset the natural order of things. It would make it expensive and difficult for banks and businesses to make money. It would lead to recession.

The chart on this page shows it... when the blue line drops below zero, it means the Federal Reserve raised short-term interest rates above long-term interest rates.

In every single instance in the last 50 years (except for one in 1966), a recession follows. (Economic growth fell to zero in the second quarter of 1967, so a stealth recession happened in that case as well.)

No Chance of a Recession Now

s. attached chart

When you think about it, you could say the Federal Reserve actually causes recessions, by forcing short-term interest rates to a painfully high level.

That's what it did in 2006/2007. The yield curve was "inverted." Short-term interest rates were above long-term rates. And then the Great Recession hit.

Now the Federal Reserve is doing the opposite... It has cut short-term interest rates to artificially low levels again. The "yield spread" is now as wide as it's been at any time in the last 50 years, as the chart shows.

It is the recipe for another boom. The Fed is artificially creating a boom. That boom, of course, will end when the Fed raises rates too high someday down the road, and the cycle begins again.

So the Fed artificially pushing interest rates too high is our signal a recession is coming. We're definitely not there yet. According to this indicator, the bigger risk going forward is a great boom, rather than a "double-dip" recession like many are calling for.

Times feel really tough out there. I know it. I live on the coast of Florida, Ground Zero of the housing bust and the subsequent economic bust.

But I strongly believe the worst is over. One reason is the yield curve. This indicator has a fantastic track record. It's saying we're not headed into another "dip." It's saying there's a boom ahead.

Good investing,
By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud  
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