01-18-2015, 02:09 PM
Thanks, NADW.
"The banks and how well they do or don't do are determined on the market." This is true for most of the banks in the world, but there are few at the tip top that actually do the opposite....they actually determine where the market goes. This is something that CNBC does not recognize nor any MBA type education, but it is a fact. The big banks determine where the market goes. Yes, the 2008 calamity was an orchestrated blackmail of the political system in order to transfer more wealth to the already bloated banks.
Just for clarification, are you saying that a possible collapse happens in a bull market that is coming? In other words, even though the markets climb, the system fails? I find this contradiction funny, because it's something I've told some people in the past....the economy will crash on an up day in the market when it's at an all-time high. Your analogies and interpretation seems to ring that same tone. If true, it will finally demonstrate that we don't live in a free market. Oh no...far from it.
As always, I appreciate your insights
"The banks and how well they do or don't do are determined on the market." This is true for most of the banks in the world, but there are few at the tip top that actually do the opposite....they actually determine where the market goes. This is something that CNBC does not recognize nor any MBA type education, but it is a fact. The big banks determine where the market goes. Yes, the 2008 calamity was an orchestrated blackmail of the political system in order to transfer more wealth to the already bloated banks.
Just for clarification, are you saying that a possible collapse happens in a bull market that is coming? In other words, even though the markets climb, the system fails? I find this contradiction funny, because it's something I've told some people in the past....the economy will crash on an up day in the market when it's at an all-time high. Your analogies and interpretation seems to ring that same tone. If true, it will finally demonstrate that we don't live in a free market. Oh no...far from it.
As always, I appreciate your insights