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Other Forums: What's New Bond Discussions Newslink |
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Posted by
BradyNet
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Friday, May 9, '03
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<……Analysts view the dollar's fall as orderly, but say a quick and calamitous slide may wreak havoc in financial markets and could yet spark concern in Washington. 'When is the dollar's decline a problem for the likes of Snow and the White House? When it is disorderly,' said David Gilmore, partner at Foreign Exchange Analytics, in an e-mail to clients this week. 'When is it disorderly? When the decline in the dollar is on the front page of The New York Times, Washington Post and Wall Street Journal, U.S. equity and bond markets are selling off and investors and traders are blaming the weak dollar,' he said. >
Infobae
<Kirchner quiere que Fidel Castro y Hugo Chávez estén en su asunción Allegados al candidato santacruceño le pidieron a la Cancillería que realice las gestiones necesarias para contar con la presencia de ambos jefes de Estado el próximo 25 de mayo.>
May I ask politely:
WHO THE F*CK IS <LUNDGREN>?????????
WHERE WAS <LUNDGREN> WHEN WE, COLORES, WERE BUYING BRA 40 AT 45??????
I just wanted to import some Russian product which is theoretically excellent in specification and in price. The downside is that they require yearly maintenance where western equivalents need two or three year maintenance schedules. That might not be a problem in Third World countries were soldiers are cheaply replaced if they are sucked out of a plane by "accident" but is definitely a problem in Western markets.
<…..POTHOLES ON THE ROAD TO RIO?
Data from EmergingPortfolio.com Fund Research showing year-to-data inflows into emerging bonds of $1.556 billion already more than doubles 2002's total, makes plain the grab at higher-yielding investments goes beyond U.S. borders. Last week, the appetite for risky debt was evident when investors snapped up a Brazilian 10-year bond deal that was increased in size from $750 million to $1 billion because of demand. Surprisingly, interest in the issue was not damped by a clause allowing Brazil to change the bond's terms with less than 100 percent approval from bondholders. In the face of all this enthusiasm, investors warned that the narrowing in spreads may have been overdone. "You can argue that spreads were excessively wide last September. It seems the pendulum has blown past fair value as we now appear to be pricing in near-perfection in some of the more risky spread sectors," said American Express Asset Management's Lundgren. "As a portfolio manager it makes you nervous to buy spread product simply because everyone else is buying spread product." >
http://biz.yahoo.com/rf/030509/worl...
Since I'm the only serious person down here, besides oil, I keep a close eye on prices of 4-hands massages with top veni beauties. To me this is a key indicator of the economy. Right now price is $50 bucks/hour, last year it was $150...life is very difficult!!!
Up she goes.
btw, D€ntist FARC11 still yielding 9% and $FARC27 yields 8.5%
KINSHASA, Congo - The rear door of a Russian-built cargo plane burst open as the aircraft carried police officials and their relatives across Congo, and 129 passengers were sucked out, airport officials said Friday. Defense Minister Irung Awan confirmed there was "a technical problem" http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tm...
Yes.. we heard that many times in the past!
Cs at par would mean 20s at 143%.. I think I will be tempted to sell and run faster than Carl Lewis!!!!
Besides - why does Veni need to service it's debt if they are have oil and don't want foreign investments ? I cant see any benefit for them to service their debt - given Chavez ideology and general economic situation. It only makes sense if they want to roll their debt eventually but that possibilty is very remote as long as Chavez is around.
There is no serious opposition in Veni. Whatever is left, pinky is taking care of it.
<VIVA PINKY, VIVA LA REVOLUCION!!!!!!!!!>
I have no clue ... I guess the same that happens to Lybia, Saudi Arabia, Russia and Qatar, among others. Let's worry by one thing at a time. All we are saying here is that Veni is out of wack with the rest of the market. Advice might be right and Brazil might go up faster than Veni.. but I think it is wise to start shifting some risk into Veni ahead of the <monkeys>, which as a by-product, works as an insurance against a sell off. In the meantime we clip 14% current yield, making our life <less difficult>.
By definition. If no oil was produced during three month no oil GDP can be accounted for. Extraordinary journalism. <Mistakes that become common wisdom as they are repeated endlessly>.
Does anybody hold veni for its non-oil economy????
Gross domestic product probably shrank 29 percent in the first quarter from the same period a year ago, according the median forecast of seven economists in a Bloomberg survey. That loss almost matches oil's one-third contribution to the Venezuelan economy. The previous worst contraction was 17 percent in the fourth quarter of 2002.
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