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Crash Blamed on V***s but the Real Cause is...
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Mar 13, 2020 19:34:21   #
Sicilianthing
 
The Crash of Wall Street Banks and Insurers this Week is Blamed on the C****av***s, but the Real Cause is Decades of Money Creation by the Fed
March 12, 2020

The financial crisis on Wall Street did not begin with public concern over the c****av***s. Headlines about the v***s here:(https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/29/world/asia/c****av***s-china.html)
did not appear in the US until January of 2020, but the Federal Reserve began making hundreds of billions of dollars each week in low-interest, overnight loans to Wall Street’s banks on September 17, 2019.

The Fed was creating money to keep banks afloat a little longer, and the cost was passed to the consumer as a rise in the cost of living. Many banks reported massive losses on Monday of this week, including CitiGroup, which lost 16.17%, and JPMorgan Chase, the largest federally-insured bank in the US, fell by 13.55%. The spendthrifts who lit the fuse to this financial bomb now are blaming the c****av***s for the consequences of their folly. -GEG (G. Edward Griffin)

President Donald Trump is bringing a pea shooter to a gunfight. If you look carefully at the charts on this page from yesterday’s trading bloodbath, it’s clear that there is a deep financial crisis playing out. The idea that this can be remedied with a payroll tax cut is the stuff of tooth fairies.

And this crisis didn’t begin with the c****av***s. Headlines about the v***s did not start appearing in the U.S. until January of this year. But the Federal Reserve began making hundreds of billions of dollars each week in cheap loans to Wall Street’s banks on September 17, 2019 — the first time it had done this since the 2008 financial crisis. You can earmark September 17, 2019 as the actual date that this Financial Crisis II got underway.

All of the toothless financial reforms of the Dodd-Frank legislation of 2010, together with the rollback of reforms since then, are now coming home to roost — as it was inevitable that they would.

Federal regulators may have their head in the sand about the heavy interlocking relationship between the Wall Street banks and insurance companies that turns into systemic contagion during a financial crisis, but the markets left no doubt about that yesterday. Every major Wall Street bank fell by double digits yesterday as did the insurance companies that are counterparties to Wall Street’s derivative trades.

To give you a snapshot idea of just how grave the situation was yesterday, JPMorgan Chase, the largest federally-insured bank in the U.S. which also holds tens of trillions of dollars of derivatives, (https://wallstreetonparade.com/2019/11/the-feds-repo-bailout-and-jpmorgans-38-trading-floors/)
fell by a larger percentage yesterday than on September 15, 2008 – the day that Lehman Brothers filed bankruptcy at the height of the 2008 financial crisis. JPMorgan Chase fell 13.55 percent yesterday versus just 10.13 percent on September 15, 2008.

Citigroup led the declines among the mega Wall Street banks yesterday with a stunning loss of 16.17 percent. This is the same bank that received the largest government bailout in global banking history in 2008.

Why it was even resuscitated by the government in 2008 remains a nagging question and there would be political upheaval if a repeat performance was suggested. (https://wallstreetonparade.com/2012/09/sheila-bairs-book-gores-citigroups-bull/)

Bank of America, parent of the sprawling retail brokerage firm, Merrill Lynch, declined by 14.70 percent while Deutsche Bank, which has a heavy derivatives footprint on Wall Street, shed 12.78 percent – erasing equity capital it desperately needs right now to stay afloat.

Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, which have the ability to trade in their own Dark Pools to protect their share price, closed down 10.39 percent and 10.37 percent, respectively.

Among the insurers with derivative exposure to Wall Street, Lincoln National (LNC) led the declines losing 16.82 percent. It is now down by 47 percent in less than a month.

MetLife (MET), which sued the government to get removed from the SIFI list (Systemically Important Financial Institution), certainly appeared to be a SIFI yesterday: it lost 16.64 percent and traded as part of the mega bank/insurer derivatives herd.

Prudential Financial (PRU), Ameriprise Financial (AMP), and AIG also experienced deep double-digit losses.

Not to put too fine a point on it, but AIG received a $185 billion bailout by the government in the 2008 financial crash. It’s not likely there is going to be the political will for a replay of that either – especially given President Trump’s large libertarian v**er base that doesn’t believe in government handouts.

T***h about the Crash Here:
https://wallstreetonparade.com/2020/03/there-was-a-bloodbath-in-wall-street-banks-and-insurers-yesterday/



Reply
Mar 13, 2020 19:48:47   #
Lonewolf
 
Sicilianthing wrote:
The Crash of Wall Street Banks and Insurers this Week is Blamed on the C****av***s, but the Real Cause is Decades of Money Creation by the Fed
March 12, 2020

The financial crisis on Wall Street did not begin with public concern over the c****av***s. Headlines about the v***s here:(https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/29/world/asia/c****av***s-china.html)
did not appear in the US until January of 2020, but the Federal Reserve began making hundreds of billions of dollars each week in low-interest, overnight loans to Wall Street’s banks on September 17, 2019.

The Fed was creating money to keep banks afloat a little longer, and the cost was passed to the consumer as a rise in the cost of living. Many banks reported massive losses on Monday of this week, including CitiGroup, which lost 16.17%, and JPMorgan Chase, the largest federally-insured bank in the US, fell by 13.55%. The spendthrifts who lit the fuse to this financial bomb now are blaming the c****av***s for the consequences of their folly. -GEG (G. Edward Griffin)

President Donald Trump is bringing a pea shooter to a gunfight. If you look carefully at the charts on this page from yesterday’s trading bloodbath, it’s clear that there is a deep financial crisis playing out. The idea that this can be remedied with a payroll tax cut is the stuff of tooth fairies.

And this crisis didn’t begin with the c****av***s. Headlines about the v***s did not start appearing in the U.S. until January of this year. But the Federal Reserve began making hundreds of billions of dollars each week in cheap loans to Wall Street’s banks on September 17, 2019 — the first time it had done this since the 2008 financial crisis. You can earmark September 17, 2019 as the actual date that this Financial Crisis II got underway.

All of the toothless financial reforms of the Dodd-Frank legislation of 2010, together with the rollback of reforms since then, are now coming home to roost — as it was inevitable that they would.

Federal regulators may have their head in the sand about the heavy interlocking relationship between the Wall Street banks and insurance companies that turns into systemic contagion during a financial crisis, but the markets left no doubt about that yesterday. Every major Wall Street bank fell by double digits yesterday as did the insurance companies that are counterparties to Wall Street’s derivative trades.

To give you a snapshot idea of just how grave the situation was yesterday, JPMorgan Chase, the largest federally-insured bank in the U.S. which also holds tens of trillions of dollars of derivatives, (https://wallstreetonparade.com/2019/11/the-feds-repo-bailout-and-jpmorgans-38-trading-floors/)
fell by a larger percentage yesterday than on September 15, 2008 – the day that Lehman Brothers filed bankruptcy at the height of the 2008 financial crisis. JPMorgan Chase fell 13.55 percent yesterday versus just 10.13 percent on September 15, 2008.

Citigroup led the declines among the mega Wall Street banks yesterday with a stunning loss of 16.17 percent. This is the same bank that received the largest government bailout in global banking history in 2008.

Why it was even resuscitated by the government in 2008 remains a nagging question and there would be political upheaval if a repeat performance was suggested. (https://wallstreetonparade.com/2012/09/sheila-bairs-book-gores-citigroups-bull/)

Bank of America, parent of the sprawling retail brokerage firm, Merrill Lynch, declined by 14.70 percent while Deutsche Bank, which has a heavy derivatives footprint on Wall Street, shed 12.78 percent – erasing equity capital it desperately needs right now to stay afloat.

Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, which have the ability to trade in their own Dark Pools to protect their share price, closed down 10.39 percent and 10.37 percent, respectively.

Among the insurers with derivative exposure to Wall Street, Lincoln National (LNC) led the declines losing 16.82 percent. It is now down by 47 percent in less than a month.

MetLife (MET), which sued the government to get removed from the SIFI list (Systemically Important Financial Institution), certainly appeared to be a SIFI yesterday: it lost 16.64 percent and traded as part of the mega bank/insurer derivatives herd.

Prudential Financial (PRU), Ameriprise Financial (AMP), and AIG also experienced deep double-digit losses.

Not to put too fine a point on it, but AIG received a $185 billion bailout by the government in the 2008 financial crash. It’s not likely there is going to be the political will for a replay of that either – especially given President Trump’s large libertarian v**er base that doesn’t believe in government handouts.

T***h about the Crash Here:
https://wallstreetonparade.com/2020/03/there-was-a-bloodbath-in-wall-street-banks-and-insurers-yesterday/
The Crash of Wall Street Banks and Insurers this W... (show quote)


great post

Reply
Mar 13, 2020 19:51:26   #
Sicilianthing
 
Lonewolf wrote:
great post


>>>

Totally, it just takes a little bit of time to dig around and real Patriots start pulling the layers back to all the BullCrap by the usual suspects.

Reply
Mar 13, 2020 20:19:48   #
plain logic
 
www.nasdaq.com%2Farticles%2Fthe-fed-has-pumped-%2524500-billion-into-the-repo-market.-where-does-it-end-2020-01-20&usg=AOvVaw2Sw5JnfWzbvu2D9HMY5reC" rel="nofollow" target="_blank">https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=13&ved=2ahUKEwj74fif05joAhVIdt8KHS_MCXAQFjAMegQIBRAB&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.nasdaq.com%2Farticles%2Fthe-fed-has-pumped-%2524500-billion-into-the-repo-market.-where-does-it-end-2020-01-20&usg=AOvVaw2Sw5JnfWzbvu2D9HMY5reC

Don't blame it on Trump, point fingers backwards...

Reply
Mar 13, 2020 20:24:15   #
Sicilianthing
 
plain logic wrote:
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=13&ved=2ahUKEwj74fif05joAhVIdt8KHS_MCXAQFjAMegQIBRAB&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.nasdaq.com%2Farticles%2Fthe-fed-has-pumped-%2524500-billion-into-the-repo-market.-where-does-it-end-2020-01-20&usg=AOvVaw2Sw5JnfWzbvu2D9HMY5reC

Don't blame it on Trump, point fingers backwards...


>>>

I’m quite aware of the Repo Crap but I also Blame Trump for betraying us and never doing a damn thing to the Federal reserve Bankster families and their operatives in his admin...

Here’s the list of G*******t, NWO agents working for the Evil ones...



Reply
Mar 13, 2020 20:27:04   #
Radiance3
 
Sicilianthing wrote:
The Crash of Wall Street Banks and Insurers this Week is Blamed on the C****av***s, but the Real Cause is Decades of Money Creation by the Fed
March 12, 2020

The financial crisis on Wall Street did not begin with public concern over the c****av***s. Headlines about the v***s here:(https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/29/world/asia/c****av***s-china.html)
did not appear in the US until January of 2020, but the Federal Reserve began making hundreds of billions of dollars each week in low-interest, overnight loans to Wall Street’s banks on September 17, 2019.

The Fed was creating money to keep banks afloat a little longer, and the cost was passed to the consumer as a rise in the cost of living. Many banks reported massive losses on Monday of this week, including CitiGroup, which lost 16.17%, and JPMorgan Chase, the largest federally-insured bank in the US, fell by 13.55%. The spendthrifts who lit the fuse to this financial bomb now are blaming the c****av***s for the consequences of their folly. -GEG (G. Edward Griffin)

President Donald Trump is bringing a pea shooter to a gunfight. If you look carefully at the charts on this page from yesterday’s trading bloodbath, it’s clear that there is a deep financial crisis playing out. The idea that this can be remedied with a payroll tax cut is the stuff of tooth fairies.

And this crisis didn’t begin with the c****av***s. Headlines about the v***s did not start appearing in the U.S. until January of this year. But the Federal Reserve began making hundreds of billions of dollars each week in cheap loans to Wall Street’s banks on September 17, 2019 — the first time it had done this since the 2008 financial crisis. You can earmark September 17, 2019 as the actual date that this Financial Crisis II got underway.

All of the toothless financial reforms of the Dodd-Frank legislation of 2010, together with the rollback of reforms since then, are now coming home to roost — as it was inevitable that they would.

Federal regulators may have their head in the sand about the heavy interlocking relationship between the Wall Street banks and insurance companies that turns into systemic contagion during a financial crisis, but the markets left no doubt about that yesterday. Every major Wall Street bank fell by double digits yesterday as did the insurance companies that are counterparties to Wall Street’s derivative trades.

To give you a snapshot idea of just how grave the situation was yesterday, JPMorgan Chase, the largest federally-insured bank in the U.S. which also holds tens of trillions of dollars of derivatives, (https://wallstreetonparade.com/2019/11/the-feds-repo-bailout-and-jpmorgans-38-trading-floors/)
fell by a larger percentage yesterday than on September 15, 2008 – the day that Lehman Brothers filed bankruptcy at the height of the 2008 financial crisis. JPMorgan Chase fell 13.55 percent yesterday versus just 10.13 percent on September 15, 2008.

Citigroup led the declines among the mega Wall Street banks yesterday with a stunning loss of 16.17 percent. This is the same bank that received the largest government bailout in global banking history in 2008.

Why it was even resuscitated by the government in 2008 remains a nagging question and there would be political upheaval if a repeat performance was suggested. (https://wallstreetonparade.com/2012/09/sheila-bairs-book-gores-citigroups-bull/)

Bank of America, parent of the sprawling retail brokerage firm, Merrill Lynch, declined by 14.70 percent while Deutsche Bank, which has a heavy derivatives footprint on Wall Street, shed 12.78 percent – erasing equity capital it desperately needs right now to stay afloat.

Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, which have the ability to trade in their own Dark Pools to protect their share price, closed down 10.39 percent and 10.37 percent, respectively.

Among the insurers with derivative exposure to Wall Street, Lincoln National (LNC) led the declines losing 16.82 percent. It is now down by 47 percent in less than a month.

MetLife (MET), which sued the government to get removed from the SIFI list (Systemically Important Financial Institution), certainly appeared to be a SIFI yesterday: it lost 16.64 percent and traded as part of the mega bank/insurer derivatives herd.

Prudential Financial (PRU), Ameriprise Financial (AMP), and AIG also experienced deep double-digit losses.

Not to put too fine a point on it, but AIG received a $185 billion bailout by the government in the 2008 financial crash. It’s not likely there is going to be the political will for a replay of that either – especially given President Trump’s large libertarian v**er base that doesn’t believe in government handouts.

T***h about the Crash Here:
https://wallstreetonparade.com/2020/03/there-was-a-bloodbath-in-wall-street-banks-and-insurers-yesterday/
The Crash of Wall Street Banks and Insurers this W... (show quote)

===============
The YTD lose on stock market until today is about $11.5 trillion. I think the biggest factor on the decline is the C****av***s.
https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/amberjamieson/c****av***s-stock-market

People pulled out their money from stocks due to lack of confidence on the market, the decline of capital market activities on all kinds. JP Morgan Chase the biggest US banks of almost $6 trillion capitalized assets lost 13.5 % of its assets.

The question is when market goes down, where does the money go? Investors pull out their shares, and therefore the money is on their banks in cash funds. Once the market gets back investors pull out their money again and buy shares then the stocks go up.
https://www.quora.com/When-you-buy-a-stock-where-does-the-money-go? Goes to the fund share who old the stock. When you sell it, money goes back to you.

We have a recession right now, QE (Quantitative Easing) could not solve this problem. It should be the return of the health of the economy (confidence of the people), by getting rid of the v***s, or having a v*****e to heal and immunize people.

That is why in cases like this, it is very important to think and move fast, because the v***s is very actively t***smitted from one person to another, spread like a wild fire. All borders and airports should have been closed right away last January 2020. But we waited.

The best solution on this could have been a quick move to stopping the entries of people from China and all other infected countries to the US. It should have been done once the v***s was known. Had we done that, we don't have this financial crisis, as well as the fear of v***s spread that is now all over. Wait for a v*****e and the stock market will return gradually.

Reply
Mar 13, 2020 20:27:50   #
Weasel Loc: In the Great State Of Indiana!!
 
Sicilianthing wrote:
The Crash of Wall Street Banks and Insurers this Week is Blamed on the C****av***s, but the Real Cause is Decades of Money Creation by the Fed
March 12, 2020

The financial crisis on Wall Street did not begin with public concern over the c****av***s. Headlines about the v***s here:(https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/29/world/asia/c****av***s-china.html)
did not appear in the US until January of 2020, but the Federal Reserve began making hundreds of billions of dollars each week in low-interest, overnight loans to Wall Street’s banks on September 17, 2019.

The Fed was creating money to keep banks afloat a little longer, and the cost was passed to the consumer as a rise in the cost of living. Many banks reported massive losses on Monday of this week, including CitiGroup, which lost 16.17%, and JPMorgan Chase, the largest federally-insured bank in the US, fell by 13.55%. The spendthrifts who lit the fuse to this financial bomb now are blaming the c****av***s for the consequences of their folly. -GEG (G. Edward Griffin)

President Donald Trump is bringing a pea shooter to a gunfight. If you look carefully at the charts on this page from yesterday’s trading bloodbath, it’s clear that there is a deep financial crisis playing out. The idea that this can be remedied with a payroll tax cut is the stuff of tooth fairies.

And this crisis didn’t begin with the c****av***s. Headlines about the v***s did not start appearing in the U.S. until January of this year. But the Federal Reserve began making hundreds of billions of dollars each week in cheap loans to Wall Street’s banks on September 17, 2019 — the first time it had done this since the 2008 financial crisis. You can earmark September 17, 2019 as the actual date that this Financial Crisis II got underway.

All of the toothless financial reforms of the Dodd-Frank legislation of 2010, together with the rollback of reforms since then, are now coming home to roost — as it was inevitable that they would.

Federal regulators may have their head in the sand about the heavy interlocking relationship between the Wall Street banks and insurance companies that turns into systemic contagion during a financial crisis, but the markets left no doubt about that yesterday. Every major Wall Street bank fell by double digits yesterday as did the insurance companies that are counterparties to Wall Street’s derivative trades.

To give you a snapshot idea of just how grave the situation was yesterday, JPMorgan Chase, the largest federally-insured bank in the U.S. which also holds tens of trillions of dollars of derivatives, (https://wallstreetonparade.com/2019/11/the-feds-repo-bailout-and-jpmorgans-38-trading-floors/)
fell by a larger percentage yesterday than on September 15, 2008 – the day that Lehman Brothers filed bankruptcy at the height of the 2008 financial crisis. JPMorgan Chase fell 13.55 percent yesterday versus just 10.13 percent on September 15, 2008.

Citigroup led the declines among the mega Wall Street banks yesterday with a stunning loss of 16.17 percent. This is the same bank that received the largest government bailout in global banking history in 2008.

Why it was even resuscitated by the government in 2008 remains a nagging question and there would be political upheaval if a repeat performance was suggested. (https://wallstreetonparade.com/2012/09/sheila-bairs-book-gores-citigroups-bull/)

Bank of America, parent of the sprawling retail brokerage firm, Merrill Lynch, declined by 14.70 percent while Deutsche Bank, which has a heavy derivatives footprint on Wall Street, shed 12.78 percent – erasing equity capital it desperately needs right now to stay afloat.

Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, which have the ability to trade in their own Dark Pools to protect their share price, closed down 10.39 percent and 10.37 percent, respectively.

Among the insurers with derivative exposure to Wall Street, Lincoln National (LNC) led the declines losing 16.82 percent. It is now down by 47 percent in less than a month.

MetLife (MET), which sued the government to get removed from the SIFI list (Systemically Important Financial Institution), certainly appeared to be a SIFI yesterday: it lost 16.64 percent and traded as part of the mega bank/insurer derivatives herd.

Prudential Financial (PRU), Ameriprise Financial (AMP), and AIG also experienced deep double-digit losses.

Not to put too fine a point on it, but AIG received a $185 billion bailout by the government in the 2008 financial crash. It’s not likely there is going to be the political will for a replay of that either – especially given President Trump’s large libertarian v**er base that doesn’t believe in government handouts.

T***h about the Crash Here:
https://wallstreetonparade.com/2020/03/there-was-a-bloodbath-in-wall-street-banks-and-insurers-yesterday/
The Crash of Wall Street Banks and Insurers this W... (show quote)


Now that's starting to make sence. I had this conversation with a friend yesterday, after the 1.5 Trillion Dollars disappeared.
Great post

Reply
Mar 13, 2020 21:01:55   #
Sicilianthing
 
Radiance3 wrote:
===============
The YTD lose on stock market until today is about $11.5 trillion. I think the biggest factor on the decline is the C****av***s.
https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/amberjamieson/c****av***s-stock-market

People pulled out their money from stocks due to lack of confidence on the market, the decline of capital market activities on all kinds. JP Morgan Chase the biggest US banks of almost $6 trillion capitalized assets lost 13.5 % of its assets.

The question is when market goes down, where does the money go? Investors pull out their shares, and therefore the money is on their banks in cash funds. Once the market gets back investors pull out their money again and buy shares then the stocks go up.
https://www.quora.com/When-you-buy-a-stock-where-does-the-money-go? Goes to the fund share who old the stock. When you sell it, money goes back to you.

We have a recession right now, QE (Quantitative Easing) could not solve this problem. It should be the return of the health of the economy (confidence of the people), by getting rid of the v***s, or having a v*****e to heal and immunize people.

That is why in cases like this, it is very important to think and move fast, because the v***s is very actively t***smitted from one person to another, spread like a wild fire. All borders and airports should have been closed right away last January 2020. But we waited.

The best solution on this could have been a quick move to stopping the entries of people from China and all other infected countries to the US. It should have been done once the v***s was known. Had we done that, we don't have this financial crisis, as well as the fear of v***s spread that is now all over. Wait for a v*****e and the stock market will return gradually.
=============== br i The YTD lose on stock market... (show quote)


>>>

Whattabuncha CRAP !
These are contributing factors mostly prior to the v***s... look at your timelines !

Go back and read the article again.

Reply
Mar 13, 2020 21:02:42   #
Sicilianthing
 
Weasel wrote:
Now that's starting to make sence. I had this conversation with a friend yesterday, after the 1.5 Trillion Dollars disappeared.
Great post


>>>

Totally... it’s like I can send people data like this and they literally deny it.. dispute it...

Wt freak is wrong with people when Facts are facts ...

Reply
Mar 13, 2020 21:37:24   #
Lonewolf
 
Radiance3 wrote:
===============
The YTD lose on stock market until today is about $11.5 trillion. I think the biggest factor on the decline is the C****av***s.
https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/amberjamieson/c****av***s-stock-market

People pulled out their money from stocks due to lack of confidence on the market, the decline of capital market activities on all kinds. JP Morgan Chase the biggest US banks of almost $6 trillion capitalized assets lost 13.5 % of its assets.

The question is when market goes down, where does the money go? Investors pull out their shares, and therefore the money is on their banks in cash funds. Once the market gets back investors pull out their money again and buy shares then the stocks go up.
https://www.quora.com/When-you-buy-a-stock-where-does-the-money-go? Goes to the fund share who old the stock. When you sell it, money goes back to you.

We have a recession right now, QE (Quantitative Easing) could not solve this problem. It should be the return of the health of the economy (confidence of the people), by getting rid of the v***s, or having a v*****e to heal and immunize people.

That is why in cases like this, it is very important to think and move fast, because the v***s is very actively t***smitted from one person to another, spread like a wild fire. All borders and airports should have been closed right away last January 2020. But we waited.

The best solution on this could have been a quick move to stopping the entries of people from China and all other infected countries to the US. It should have been done once the v***s was known. Had we done that, we don't have this financial crisis, as well as the fear of v***s spread that is now all over. Wait for a v*****e and the stock market will return gradually.
=============== br i The YTD lose on stock market... (show quote)


Ride it out the value of your shares are down but the company they represent are still in business and you own a part of them

Reply
Mar 13, 2020 21:38:58   #
Sicilianthing
 
Lonewolf wrote:
Ride it out the value of your shares are down but the company they represent are still in business and you own a part of them


>>>

For now.

Reply
Mar 13, 2020 21:49:29   #
Radiance3
 
Lonewolf wrote:
Ride it out the value of your shares are down but the company they represent are still in business and you own a part of them

=============
That is what I'm doing Loney, I am leaving it there. I invested that for charity, will donate it some days.

Reply
Mar 13, 2020 21:51:27   #
Radiance3
 
Sicilianthing wrote:
>>>

Whattabuncha CRAP !
These are contributing factors mostly prior to the v***s... look at your timelines !

Go back and read the article again.

===========
I based my decision from my own experience. I am an investor, and that is what happened to me and all those who invested They are not bunch of craps. They are real.

Reply
Mar 13, 2020 21:53:17   #
Sicilianthing
 
Radiance3 wrote:
===========
I based my decision from my own experience. I am an investor, and that is what happened to me and all those who invested They are not bunch of craps. They are real.


>>>

The Crash was underway long before the V***s appeared.

Reply
Mar 13, 2020 22:12:05   #
Weasel Loc: In the Great State Of Indiana!!
 
Sicilianthing wrote:
>>>

The Crash was underway long before the V***s appeared.


Exactly. And if I'm not mistaken, the 1.5 Trillion that the Fed threw in the market yesterday disappeared in about 60 seconds?

Reply
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