Anonymous ID: e4dce4 Feb. 1, 2019, 6:54 p.m. No.4996241   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>4994400

 

>Truly, death is at my door with every breath I take now, but it's better to die in the service of FREEDOM, than wallow in a world of tyranny.

>

>WWG1WGA

>

>My Two Cents

 

Is worth moar than two cents mate.

Stand fighting!

 

As long as it gets posted and someone see's it that's really all that matters. If I had a penny for all the financial stuff I post that just sails by the bakers and all these newfags on general I would be rich..but that's not why I do it.

The insider sales in our markets are off the hook and the most recent example is BNP Paribas selling out of almost 2/3rds of a billion of a hawaiian bank and it just sails past.

The story about the russian bombers off canad's coast last wekend was posted as it happened however the comped baker waited over two hours to post a screen cap from some obscure site with no maps or relevant information. By the time it was posted the event had already habbened.

 

Chin up mate…WE will prevail!!!

Anonymous ID: e4dce4 Feb. 1, 2019, 6:57 p.m. No.4996294   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>6997

>>4995775

At least you guys get some good discussions here. But the baker thing is what it is. Hate that saying but can't think of anything else to describe it.

 

We had an influx of newfags about three weeks ago and it's turned into a chat board. Knew it would habben as it was discussed on general months ago.

 

o7

Anonymous ID: e4dce4 Feb. 6, 2019, 12:52 p.m. No.5056974   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>5035422

Here is a mini bread about GOOG's 10-Q report.

It was filed later than normal as we were waiting for it.

 

>>5038507 pb

 

Suffice to say that GOOG basically gets away with reporting an earnings 'beat' because they use massive amounts of FOREX and derivative transactions to produce the results they want everyone to see.

 

This was as far as it was able to be taken due to the obfuscation contained in the form 10-Q

o7

Anonymous ID: e4dce4 Feb. 22, 2019, 1:25 a.m. No.5322223   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1553

Bursting Of Australia's Housing Bubble Could Topple The Government

 

In one of the world's most developed economies, soaring costs for housing and education are rapidly widening the wealth-distribution gap between the younger and older generations amid the backdrop of one of the longest economic expansions in the country's history. As younger workers grapple with the notion that they may never be able to afford a home, a backlash is stirring in the political arena, as younger voters embrace progressive (some would say "socialist") politicians.

 

No, we're not talking about the US. We're talking about Australia.

 

After six years of tumultuous Liberal rule, the Labour Party is hoping to wrest back control of the government during elections later this year. And it sees tackling this intergenerational divide as the best way to do it. And combating the country's increasingly unaffordable housing bubble is a key plank of its proposals. The party has pledged to curb tax breaks for property investors that helped drive up home prices (alongside an influx of foreign capital).

 

Labor leader Bill Shorten has promised to scrap tax refunds worth A$5 billion ($3.6 billion) a year for share investors. The benefits are already being seen in the polls, where Labour is seeing a slight advantage.

 

After 27 years of uninterrupted economic growth, Australians are struggling with the fact that the wealthy have enjoyed the bulk of the economic benefits.

 

While Australia has avoided recession for 27 years, the spoils have not been shared evenly as older people capture a greater share of the nation’s wealth. According to the Grattan Institute, households headed by people aged 65-74 were on average A$566,000 wealthier in 2015-16 than the same age group was 12 years earlier. That far outstrips growth in other bands and compares with just A$38,000 for the 25-34 age group.

 

And economists are worried that such an extreme concentration of wealth among older Australians

 

rest at link

 

https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-02-21/australias-housing-bubble-could-topple-government