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GAMBLING ADDICTION with trading

how many of you never seem to win consistently?

how many of you hold on because you did have some winning days which means you have potential?

how many of you tell yourselves that its not an addiction,its just a passion you have?

how many of you keep on replenishing your trading accounts because just like any business,you always lose money at the start?
how many of you tell yoursleves your losses are the BEST THING that ever happened because thats the best way to learn?

how many of you think of crafty ways to get some extra money wired into your trading accounts?

how many of you say you would have won if you only “stuck to your discipline”?

how many of you are just waiting FOR THAT SPECIAL DAY WHEN EVERYTHING FINALLY CLICKS AND YOU’VE FINALLY FOUND THAT EDGE?

how many of you fall into a depression and feel as if someone has hit you in the heart with a hammer aftr a big loss.

how many of you cannot wait for the next day to make some money back?

my favorite: “tomorrows a new day and i will start fresh, a new trading style that will be disciplined”.

there are many guys that make lots of money trading for a living..really,you seriously believe that?

Have Lunch with Warren Buffett for $25,000

An eBay auction is currently running this week, which is offering the winning bidder lunch with famed billionaire and investor Warren Buffett, one of the top three wealthiest people in the world.

All proceeds of the auction will be donated to the Glide Foundation in San Francisco, which provides help for the homeless and poor.

The current bid on the auction is $25,000, and if no one else bids, it wall be a bargain, as last year, the Canadian firm Salida Capital Corp. paid $1,680,300 for the lunch, and two yours ago, Zhao Danyang paid $2,110,100. The auction ends Jun 11, 2010 at 7:30 pm PDT or 10:30 Eastern time.

Latest Rumor Sees 16-17% Greek Bond Haircut, Sending European Stocks Soaring

The latest targeted leak in the European “stress” tests is that according to German bank sources, the discount on Greek debt will be in the 16-17% ballpark. This compares to an earlier rumor leak of a 10% discount on Greek debt which however did not sufficiently spike the market, leading to rumor #2 which so far has done a good job at pushing the AUDJPY (aka stocks) higher. The quid pro quo however, is to take not only German but now French bonds, will be out of the “stressed” picture. As Reuters reports: “The presumed markdown applied to French sovereign bonds will be 0.7 percent, one of the sources, both of which are based in Germany, added. “German sovereign bonds will not be stressed,” both sources confirmed.” Of course, with Greek bonds being stressed to market (which is where the discount actually implies they are tested), French bonds would would suffer a far greater markdown than 0.7%. But then again, the EU has already bought up a ton of Greek bonds, and little if any French. Can’t have the bank pick and choose which country to bail out now, can it.

Just see Today Morning ,I had written European Market short term trend is up !!

Subbarao fears fiscal deficit to fuel next crisis

RBI GOVERNER

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) governor, Duvvuri Subbarao, expressed fear that the next financial debacle could stem from a currency crisis or from the way the government handles its ‘stimulus exit’. Speaking at the first International Research Conference organised by RBI here on Saturday, Subbarao said,

“I worry that in resolving this financial crisis, perhaps we are sowing the seeds of the next crisis. Next crisis could be a currency or a fiscal crisis.” The central banker, however, denied that RBI would back out from its commitment to full convertibility of rupee but would impart flexibility to its pre-determined course in the light of the recent global economic developments.

Participating in a panel discussion, the RBI governor said the developed economies may fail to wind down their borrowings, leading to cyclical deficits morphing into ‘structural fiscal deficits’, affecting the system as a whole. In the wake of global credit crisis, following the US sub-prime crisis in 2008, many governments and central banks pumped in huge funds and resorted to low-interest-rate monetary policies, for boosting their sagging economies. These have resulted in bloating of fiscal deficits. (more…)

Italy’s interest payments on debt subject to great uncertainty – Bank of Italy

Did he really say that?  Crikey.

EUR/USD slips back down through 1.2100, presently 1.2095.

EDIT: Headline misleading.   Bank of Italy Director Salvatore Rossi, speaking before Senate hearing, said Italy’s interest payments on debt were subject to great uncertainty and that a 1% rise or fall in interest rates on debt maturing from 2011 would cut or hike the 2012 deficit by 0.5 percentage points.  Ahhh.

2009 Country Stock Market Performance

Below we highlight the year-to-date percentage change (local currency) for the major equity indices of 82 countries.  So far this year, 71 of the 82 countries are in positive territory, and the average change of all countries is 33.27%.  With a gain of 20.76%, the S&P 500 is 13 percentage points below the average, yet it’s the second best G-7 performer behind Canada so far in 2009.

The BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China) have been standouts this year.  Russia is up the most out of all countries with a gain of 126.71%.  Brazil, China, and India are all up more than 70%.  Along with Russia, the Ukraine, Argentina, and Peru are up more than 100% year to date.

Eleven countries are down so far in 2009.  Ghana is down the most at -48.26%, followed by Puerto Rico (-40.56%), Bermuda (-38.36%), and Costa Rica (-35.37%).
2009 country stock market

Greece Prepares To Sue Wall Street

The only benefit of hitting rock bottom is you can’t really fall further. Which is precisely what has happened with Greece. The little country that started off the chain reaction that has already led to a currency and liquidity crisis, and made the solvency crisis in Europe all too tangible, by belonging to a monetary union it had no place in (a union which no reason to exist in the first place), is once again reminding the world of its existence, this time by G-Pap opening his mouth and inserted two whole legs in it. In an interview with CNN’s Fareed Zakaria to be aired today, G-Pap has threatened he may sue US banks for “contributing” to his country’s debt crisis. For those of you lacking in analogy skills, Greece is in the same shoes as a bankrupt debtor who wants to sue his creditors for daring to hike up his interest rate when the only means he has to roll his debt is by using another credit card (this one issued by US and European Taxpayers), even as bankruptcy is literally hours away. The Greek summation: that of a petulant 5 year old who has just broken dad’s favorite gadget: “We have made our mistakes,” Papandreou said. “We are living up to this responsibility. But at the same time, give us a chance. We’ll show you.” Now that would be amusing – after Greece destroyed its economy the first go round, we can’t wait to see what the country does for an encore. The only reason Greece is not bankrupt now is because even as its past mistakes have caught up with it and climaxed in a solvency and liquidity crisis unseen since the Lehman days, the country’s end would bring down all of Europe. If Greece would not have impaired French, German and UK banks, the country would have long been allowed to default. Yet diversion is always a good tactic: let’s bring the “speculators” into this yet again. After all it is unheard of in these turbulent Keynesian times for anyone, especially our own Fed Chairman, to own up to their endless mistakes. It is always, without exception, someone else’s fault.

More from Bloomberg:

 
 

Papandreou said the decision on whether to go after U.S. banks will be made after a Greek parliamentary investigation into the cause of the crisis.In the CNN interview, Papandreou said many in the international community have engaged in “Greek bashing” and find it easy “to scapegoat Greece.” He said Greeks “are a hard-working people. We are a proud people.”

“Greece will look into the past and see how things went,” Papandreou said. “There are similar investigations going on in other countries and in the United States. This is where I think, yes, the financial sector, I hear the words fraud and lack of transparency. So yes, yes, there is great responsibility here.” (more…)

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