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Mensagens - hermes

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1901
Comunidade de Traders / Re:Como enfrentar a queda do Euro
« em: 2012-07-26 11:07:10 »
Tb duvido seriamente que o euro desapareça. Agora o dólar e a libra parecem-me as pior escolhas possíveis para proteger o capital acumulado. Segue um bom artigo @ ZH. Na minha opinião o Caesar Lack está a menospresar a cada vez mais provável hiperinflação na Índia como catalizador dos problemas nos EUA e no Reino Unido, mas é natural pois ele é um economista e não um psicólogo ou sociólogo...

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UBS Issues Hyperinflation Warning For US And UK, Calls It Purely "A Fiscal Phenomenon"

by Tyler Durden on 07/18/2012 14:22 -0400

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/ubs-issues-hyperinflation-warning-us-and-uk-calls-it-purely-fiscal-phenomenon

Supposedly warnings about the latent inflationary threat posed by simply ridiculous non-financial debt levels (as presented most recently here yesterday), not to mention financial debt (which as MF Global's rehypothecated implosion demonstrated so vividly can be any number between minus and plus infinity, thank you London "regulators") from the blogosphere can be ignored ($15 trillion melting ice cube that is shadow banking which also doubles as the best inflationary buffer known to man, notwithstanding). After all, what does the blogosphere know: remember, Libor has been repeatedly proven to not be manipulated, as the mainstream media so strenly claimed year after year after year until it had no choice but to do a 180 and pretend its advertiser paid for lies in the past 3 years never existed. But when these same warnings emanate from the "very serious people" at UBS, economists with a Ph.D. at that, it may be a little more difficult to dismiss them. So here it is: "Hyperinflation Revisited" from Caesar Lack, PhD, economist.

From UBS, highlights ours.

Global Risk Watch: Hyperinflation Revisited

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Hyperinflation: Paper money only has a value because of the confidence that the money can be exchanged for a certain quantity of goods or services in the future. If this confidence is eroded, hyperinflation becomes a threat. If holders of cash start to question the future purchasing power of the currency and switch into real assets, asset prices start to rise and the purchasing power of money starts to fall. Other cash holders may realize the falling purchasing power of their money and join the exit from paper into real assets. When this self-reinforcing cycle turns into a panic, we have hyperinflation. The classic examples of hyperinflation are Germany in the 1920s, Hungary after the Second World War, and Zimbabwe, where hyperinflation ended in 2009. Indeed, hyperinflation is not that rare at all. Economist Peter Bernholz has identified no fewer than 28 cases of hyperinflation in the 20th century.


Our monthly global inflation barometer tracks the risks to our global inflation outlook as part of our “Global risk watch” series. Apart from deflation and high inflation, we identify hyperinflation as a third risk to our view of moderate global inflation rates. We currently see it as very unlikely that any of these three risk scenarios will materialize over the next 12 months, i.e. we estimate their probability at below 10%. However, given the devastating effects hyperinflation would have, we want to explore the risk of hyperinflation in more detail.

Hyperinflation has little to do with "normal" price inflation. In particular, hyperinflation is not an escalation of "normal" inflation. "Normal" inflation denotes a steady and continuous decline in the purchasing power of money, which is ultimately attributable to an increase in the money supply.

Hyperinflation, on the other hand, is a collapse of confidence in money, which results in an accelerating flight out of money into real assets and goods, and thus an accelerating loss of the purchasing power of money.

Hyperinflation is a fiscal phenomenon

Ultimately, hyperinflation is a fiscal phenomenon; that is, hyperinflation results from unsustainable fiscal deficits. Peter Bernholz notes that historically, cases of hyperinflation have been preceded by the central bank monetizing a significant proportion of the government deficit.  After investigating 29 hyperinflationary episodes, 28 of which happened in the 20th century, Bernholz writes: "We draw the conclusion that the creation of money to finance a public budget deficit has been the reason for hyperinflation."

When government deficits become unsustainable, austerity is often the first reaction. Austerity is deflationary, recessionary, and painful. If the austerity necessary to balance the budget is deemed to be too painful, a government can either choose to default or to inflate the currency.

If the country concerned has its own currency, it will usually choose to inflate it. If government finances do not improve sufficiently, confidence in the currency may evaporate at some point and hyperinflation may arise. Hyperinflation is more closely related to deflation than to "normal" high inflation, as hyperinflation can be viewed as the result of a failed attempt at printing money to avoid the deflation that would be caused by austerity.

In our view, there is some risk that hyperinflation could arise in one or more large currencies. As a consequence of the burst credit bubble, we are seeing unsustainable government deficits in many large countries. Deleveraging and austerity are deflationary and recessionary. Central banks around the world are fighting these deflationary and recessionary tendencies by massively easing monetary policy. Having exhausted the interest rate instrument, global central banks are increasingly turning to the alternative measures of quantitative and qualitative easing (see Box). While direct government debt monetization by central banks is still the exception, the elaborate toolbox of central banks allows for indirect debt monetization, for example, by accepting government bonds as collateral in temporary but repeated operations. In the two following sections, we illustrate the current unsustainable developments in global fiscal and monetary policy. Government debt rising at an unsustainable speed In the wake of the financial crisis of 2008, government deficits increased massively around the world. However, despite widespread commitments to austerity, government deficits are still at unsustainable levels (see Fig. 1).


According to International Monetary Fund (IMF) estimates, the combined government net borrowing of the world's 10 largest deficit countries will amount to USD 2.657 trn (or 5.9% of GDP on average) in 2012, half of which is due to the US alone. The 2012 deficits are only slightly lower than the deficits in the three previous post-crisis years. Before the financial crisis (1990–2007), average net borrowing of the Top 10 deficit countries amounted to 3.7% of GDP; from 2009–2012, net borrowing climbed to 7.4% on average. Average annual nominal GDP growth since 1990 has amounted to 5% in these countries. In order to be sustainable, i.e. in order for a country's government debt/GDP ratio to decline, its deficit must fall below the nominal growth rate of GDP. Given the current low growth and inflation environment, the deficits would actually have to fall significantly below the 5% mark in order to stabilize the debt/GDP ratio. Note that the 2012 IMF forecast of a net borrowing of 5.9% for the 10 high-deficit countries could well turn out to be too optimistic, as the recent negative economic news has worsened the fiscal outlook.

Global monetary policy expansion accelerated

Fig. 2 illustrates the accelerating expansion of monetary policy after the financial crisis of 2008. In the years leading up to the collapse of Lehman (2002–2008), the global monetary base grew at an average annual rate of 10.5% (in local currencies, weighted by GDP). Since the Lehman collapse, the average annual growth of the global monetary base has more than doubled to 21.6%. Currently, the global monetary base amounts to USD 14.1 trn and is up 20.4% on the previous year.


Fig. 3 shows the global monetary policy expansion and the combined net borrowing of the Top 10 deficit countries. In fact, in 2011, the global central bank balance sheet and the global monetary base expansion were about equal to the deficit countries' combined net borrowing. Although central banks do not directly monetize government deficits (with some exceptions), one can argue that central banks are at least accommodating the current excessive governments deficits.


Neither the government deficits of many large countries nor the speed of the current global monetary policy expansion are sustainable. If government finances do not improve and the global monetary policy expansion is not halted in time, hyperinflation could set in. However, it is not clear how much fiscal and monetary policy can expand before a loss of confidence in paper money sets in.

Countries at risk

Bernholz notes that preceding a case of hyperinflation, government deficits usually amount to more than 20% of government expenditures, and that deficits amounting to 40% or more of government expenditures clearly cannot be maintained.

Of the Top 10 deficit countries, India, the US, Japan, Spain and the UK all exhibit government net borrowing above 20% of government  expenditures (Table 1). However, Spain does not have its own currency and therefore cannot trigger hyperinflation on its own. The government net borrowing of the Eurozone as a whole amounts to only 11% of total government expenditures.


The euro is therefore not a prime candidate for hyperinflation, as long as the core countries do not leave the currency union. Although India is one of the Top 10 deficit countries, an outbreak of hyperinflation there would be of relatively minor concern to the global investor. Unlike the US and the UK, Japan is a creditor nation and not a debtor nation. In fact, Japan has the world's largest net international investment position (see Fig. 4), while the US is the world's largest net debtor. We think that a creditor nation is less at risk of hyperinflation than a debtor nation, as a debtor nation relies not only on the confidence of domestic creditors, but also of foreign creditors. We therefore think that the hyperinflation risk to global investors is largest in the US and the UK.


Indicators to watch


The more the fiscal situation deteriorates and the more central banks debase their currencies, the higher the risk of a loss of confidence in the future purchasing power of money. Indicators to watch in order to determine the risk of hyperinflation therefore pertain to the fiscal situation and monetary policy stance in high-deficit countries. Note that current government deficits and the current size of central bank balance sheets are not sufficient to indicate the sustainability of the fiscal or monetary policy stance and thus, the risk of hyperinflation. The fiscal situation can worsen without affecting the current fiscal deficit, for example when governments assume contingent liabilities of the banking system or when the economic outlook worsens unexpectedly. Similarly, the monetary policy stance can expand without affecting the size of the central bank balance sheet. This happens for example when central banks lower collateral requirements or monetary policy rates, in particular the interest rate paid on reserves deposited with the central bank. A significant deterioration of the fiscal situation or a significant expansion of the monetary policy stance in the large-deficit countries could lead us to increase the probability we assign to the risk of hyperinflation.

Gold – the canary in the coalmine

Due to its long standing as the foremost, non-inflatable, liquid alternative currency, gold is the first destination for wealth fleeing from paper  money into real assets. Gold can be considered a hyperinflation hedge, and its price can be considered an indicator for the probability of hyperinflation. A sudden rise in the price of gold would be a warning sign that the risk of hyperinflation is increasing, in particular if it went along with a worsening of the fiscal situation in the deficit countries and an easing of monetary policy. Not only gold, but also other commodities, as well as the stock market, would profit from investors fleeing from money and from government debt. Thus a strong rise of gold, commodities, and stock markets, accompanied by a fall in the currency and in government bond prices (i.e. a rise in yields) could signal the approach of hyperinflation. We will continue to monitor global inflation developments and change our risk assessment in the global inflation monitor according to current events.


1902
Testes e Imagens / hermes - images
« em: 2012-07-26 10:25:26 »
.

1903
Comunidade de Traders / Re:Vampiros
« em: 2012-07-25 10:24:20 »
é preferivel vender aos portugueses  do que aos alemães ou chineses.

Negociatas durante 6 anos foram ás carradas, agora é que o povo se indigna,

era TGV, AEROPORTO, etc,etc,etc

o população agora fica muito indignada pelo relvas mas quando se roubam 2 gravadores e se continua em funções,
ou qd se atenta contra a liberdade de expressão (escutas de aveiro)  já não havia problema nenhum.

A unica diferença é que agora o Pais está completamente teso, logo á que berrar

Dois errados não fazem um certo.

1904
A publicidade faz-se onde haja gente que a possa ver.  :D

Por mim não lhe ligo grande coisa, seja online, seja ofline...

1905
Sim isso é verdade, mas eles têm colocado mais anúncios por resultado pelo menos nas pesquisas que eu faço...esse crescimento de volume talvez não seja sustentável

Tens a certeza que isso se refere só ao google search? O Adsense não está incluído aí? Seria estranho o google estar a fazer essa distinção...

1906
O preço por clique está cada vez menor



http://searchengineland.com/are-the-analysts-wrong-about-googles-undervalued-stock-128376


O declive da verde parece-me maior que o simétrico do da vermelha e como a verde está a aumentar, o produto tb está a aumentar. Ora o produto é aquilo que é importante.

1907
Comunidade de Traders / Re:Pormenores técnicos
« em: 2012-07-24 13:11:56 »
O verificador ortográfico das mensagens está em inglês, dá para configurar para português ?


Não sei se te ajuda, mas o firefox permite fazê-lo para todos os sites. O seguinte link explica como se faz:

http://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/how-do-i-use-firefox-spell-checker

e o dicionário de português europeu encontra-se aqui:

https://en-us.add-ons.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/addon/european-portuguese-spellcheck/?src=search

Parece que tb é possível no chrome:

https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/jfpdnkkdgghlpdgldicfgnnnkhdfhocg#detail/jfpdnkkdgghlpdgldicfgnnnkhdfhocg

No IE, não sei.

1908
O problema do investimento em obrigações não se resume ao risco da contraparte. O outro problema é o valor presente das obrigações diminuir, seja pelo aumento da taxa de inflação, seja pelo aumento das taxas de juro. Ora as taxas de juro não só estão em mínimos históricos, como agora foi exposto que tais níveis são artificiais e pior ainda a mão do mágico foi exposta...

Não obstante as taxas de juro na Europa serem parcialmente imunes, estas estão em mínimos históricos e qq subidas da taxa de juro da ainda divisa de referência acabará por se infiltrar tb na Europa.

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The Real Libor Scandal ~Paul Craig Roberts and Nomi Prins

July 14, 2012

http://www.paulcraigroberts.org/2012/07/14/the-real-libor-scandal/

According to news reports, UK banks fixed the London interbank borrowing rate (Libor) with the complicity of the Bank of England (UK central bank) at a low rate in order to obtain a cheap borrowing cost. The way this scandal is playing out is that the banks benefitted from borrowing at these low rates. Whereas this is true, it also strikes us as simplistic and as a diversion from the deeper, darker scandal.

Banks are not the only beneficiaries of lower Libor rates. Debtors (and investors) whose floating or variable rate loans are pegged in some way to Libor also benefit. One could argue that by fixing the rate low, the banks were cheating themselves out of interest income, because the effect of the low Libor rate is to lower the interest rate on customer loans, such as variable rate mortgages that banks possess in their portfolios. But the banks did not fix the Libor rate with their customers in mind. Instead, the fixed Libor rate enabled them to improve their balance sheets, as well as help to perpetuate the regime of low interest rates. The last thing the banks want is a rise in interest rates that would drive down the values of their holdings and reveal large losses masked by rigged interest rates.

Indicative of greater deceit and a larger scandal than simply borrowing from one another at lower rates, banks gained far more from the rise in the prices, or higher evaluations of floating rate financial instruments (such as CDOs), that resulted from lower Libor rates. As prices of debt instruments all tend to move in the same direction, and in the opposite direction from interest rates (low interest rates mean high bond prices, and vice versa), the effect of lower Libor rates is to prop up the prices of bonds, asset-backed financial instruments, and other “securities.” The end result is that the banks’ balance sheets look healthier than they really are.

On the losing side of the scandal are purchasers of interest rate swaps, savers who receive less interest on their accounts, and ultimately all bond holders when the bond bubble pops and prices collapse.

We think we can conclude that Libor rates were manipulated lower as a means to bolster the prices of bonds and asset-backed securities. In the UK, as in the US, the interest rate on government bonds is less than the rate of inflation. The UK inflation rate is about 2.8%, and the interest rate on 20-year government bonds is 2.5%. Also, in the UK, as in the US, the government debt to GDP ratio is rising. Currently the ratio in the UK is about double its average during the 1980-2011 period.

The question is, why do investors purchase long term bonds, which pay less than the rate of inflation, from governments whose debt is rising as a share of GDP? One might think that investors would understand that they are losing money and sell the bonds, thus lowering their price and raising the interest rate.

Why isn’t this happening?

PCR’s June 5 column, “Collapse at Hand,” explained that despite the negative interest rate, investors were making capital gains from their Treasury bond holdings, because the prices were rising as interest rates were pushed lower.

What was pushing the interest rates lower?

The answer is even clearer now. First, as PCR noted, Wall Street has been selling huge amounts of interest rate swaps, essentially a way of shorting interest rates and driving them down. Thus, causing bond prices to rise.

Secondly, fixing Libor at lower rates has the same effect. Lower UK interest rates on government bonds drive up their prices.

In other words, we would argue that the bailed-out banks in the US and UK are returning the favor that they received from the bailouts and from the Fed and Bank of England’s low rate policy by rigging government bond prices, thus propping up a government bond market that would otherwise, one would think, be driven down by the abundance of new debt and monetization of this debt, or some part of it.

How long can the government bond bubble be sustained? How negative can interest rates be driven?

Can a declining economy offset the impact on inflation of debt creation and its monetization, with the result that inflation falls to zero, thus making the low interest rates on government bonds positive?

According to his public statements, zero inflation is not the goal of the Federal Reserve chairman. He believes that some inflation is a spur to economic growth, and he has said that his target is 2% inflation. At current bond prices, that means a continuation of negative interest rates.

The latest news completes the picture of banks and central banks manipulating interest rates in order to prop up the prices of bonds and other debt instruments. We have learned that the Fed has been aware of Libor manipulation (and thus apparently supportive of it) since 2008. Thus, the circle of complicity is closed. The motives of the Fed, Bank of England, US and UK banks are aligned, their policies mutually reinforcing and beneficial. The Libor fixing is another indication of this collusion.

Unless bond prices can continue to rise as new debt is issued, the era of rigged bond prices might be drawing to an end. It would seem to be only a matter of time before the bond bubble bursts.

Nomi Prins is author of It Takes A Pillage and a former managing director of Goldman Sachs.

1909
Comunidade de Traders / Re:WE ARE DOOMED
« em: 2012-07-22 12:32:41 »
Permitor perdas aos obrigacionistas é o que eles deviam fazer mais. Infelizmente só o fizeram com uns trocos no caso da Grécia.

Parece que a Espanha é a seguinte, cf. a pesquisa no goolge news: spain senior bondholders ecb, mas parece que o governo espanhol não quer, pelo que li no DE.  :D

1910
Comunidade de Traders / Re:Ouro - Tópico principal
« em: 2012-07-21 21:30:34 »
Não há nada que um bom mês de setembro não resolva  :D, pois o ouro é sazonal:

  • Época alta -> Setembro -- Ano Novo Chinês.
  • Época baixa -> Ano Novo Chinês -- Setembro.

1911
Comunidade de Traders / Re:WE ARE DOOMED
« em: 2012-07-21 20:34:19 »
Os políticos adaptam-se às realidades vigentes, se é que querem manter a sua "relevãncia"...

Citação de: Mayer Amschel Rothschild
"Give me control of a nation's money and I care not who makes the laws."

E o BCE, planeado na década de 60, cada vez controla mais, desde a sua conspícua auxência no mercado secundário da dívida, até a fazer os obrigacionistas séniores comungarem tb das perdas.  :D


1912
O ouro não é só um hedge para a inflação, é tb um hedge para a morte ou doença grave de uma moeda que necessite a amputação de alguns zeros à direita... Bem como uma forma de beneficiar de tal, mesmo que a moeda em cuidados intensivos não seja a tua, pelo menos se a divisa tiver importância sistémica, pois o (novo) uso é que determina o valor.

Além de ser bastante eficiente a preservar o poder de compra e a transmiti-lo aos teus descendentes, pois está fora do alcance das mãozinhas dos teus concidadãos e dos governos que eles elegem.

1913
Comentador imobiliário,

Oferta casas/andares em espanha: 5.700.00 casas
Procura espanhola                            :   250.000casas

Falta procura imobiliária de estrangeiros em Espanha,

Com uma oferta 20 x maior que a procura, não é claro que haja muitos estrangeiros interessados em comprar para vender mais tarde e até diria que o comentador está a delirar.

1914
Não creio que haja um sector específico para as empresas de nanotecnologia, pois é um campo bastante vasto e fino [pouco "profundo" se preferirem] nela cabe praticamente tudo e mais alguma coisa, desde que seja pequeno, como microesferas na indústria cosmética, ou substâncias coloidais na indústria alimentar, cristais líquidos em todos os tipos de ecrans, ou envolva átomos e moléculas como a química [e a física] passando pelas estruturas microscópias, como por exemplos chips e circuitos integrados ou os pequenos "buracos" nos CDs e DVDs. Ao fim e ao cabo é uma palavra para vender sonhos e obter financiamentos.

Onde estão a acontecer coisas importantes é na biologia, onde já se podem construir células à la carte, devido ao cada vez maior conhecimento do que é codificado por cada gene:

http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn18942-immaculate-creation-birth-of-the-first-synthetic-cell.html

1915
Off-Topic / Re:Teste
« em: 2012-07-09 15:29:46 »
Dá para aumentar o tamanho da assinatura para 500 bytes, como no antigo fórum?

Ps. O corretor ortográfico parece não estar a funcionar por enquanto.

1916
Off-Topic / Teste
« em: 2012-07-09 13:30:28 »
Teste.

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