Taiwan lifts forex trading punishment on Deutsche -sources

Started by OZER, Feb 07, 2022, 06:05 PM

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I would advice people to don#39t take a loan for investment, unless it#39s something you know you can easily pay off within one month or two with your main income. Taking a loan for investment purposes is like gambling with money that you don#39t even have, so ask yourself are you really able to afford that kind of loss?.


 will hit $3 when recession hits. It doesn't help that they pay their employees with stock.


From the clip: There is no way the Fed can help and it will all depend on Congress.  Me: Alrighty, time to die.

This is purely the fault of investors and poor regulation. If you don#39t see it this way you will never grow up and you don#39t deserve wealth.


Seems a bit late on his part saying this now.....

It won't be stopped until we get more Volcker and less Powell.

a total exchange = bronze age  collapse on steroids rich and powerful will lose everything. tactical use i mean who wants to join the 7th Chinese us or russian army when the previous 6 have been destroyed you'd have to force em into service and they'd abandon the army immediately .

So.... Inflation has nothing to do with the fact that we printed 40% of all US dollars in the last year? Interesting.

Inflation forces people to spend less and use less.  It's not necessarily a bad thing.  It's like fever or pain, tells you that something is wrong.

The people you have talking about crypto cannot even spell it...come on.

Brian Brooks like the dad in the room educating everyone

They're talking about run-of-the-mill inflation driven by wage-price spirals, and saying that's how you get an inflationary spiral. In my mind, that's not the only way. We have a fiat currency and it's value is really derived from people's faith in it's value. You can print money and encourage borrowing etc, but much like stock market bubbles, there is a tipping point in there when all the feedbacks turn from negative to positive.  Normally, you hold money, it holds it's value, there's no real push to gain or spend it. If you think inflation is going to increase, it now becomes a hot potato that you want to spend as soon as you get it. You do this by buying useful assets like houses, land, food, things you need. When everyone does this it drives up the price, which would normally dampen demand, but if the expectation that money will continue losing value and the price will only increase, then the price doesn't matter anymore. Sellers can ask arbitrarily high prices. But who's going to sell into this and accept that money? Thus supply goes down at the same time demand goes up, further exacerbating the situation.  The government has been pumping new money into the economy to try and stimulate it, yet velocity stays low. Who needs to spend all that money under normal circumstances? But what happens when it all starts losing value? All that "cold" money suddenly turns hot, and the *effective* money supply suddenly increases. Meanwhile, everyone is also incentivized to borrow as much as possible to "short" the currency, further increasing the supply. But who wants to lend into this? The credit market slows, and the government steps in as "lender of last resort" again....using printed money.  Meanwhile, the massive amounts of money tied up in the stock market suddenly need a new home. I mean, who wants to hold a stock when all you can get out of it is increasingly worthless money. You paper gains are impressive, but it's only a reflection of the fact your asset is losing value, because the only value it has is denominated in dollars (rather than any kind of tangible use).  I mean it goes on and on. Wage-price spirals may be a part of 'normal' inflation but they don't really play into hyperinflation.