bo Kerimb i ja to jedna osoba<kerimb> pisze:Nigdy się nie ukrywałem, tak dla jasności. Pisałem zawsze tak samo i łatwo było stwierdzić, że ja to ja. Jeśli admin dotrzyma słowa, to tak już zostanie. Osiągnęliśmy kompromis i tyle w temacie.xpep pisze:widze ze sie kerimb coraz ambitniej ukrywasz
Eur/Usd & Gbp/Yen analizy i prognozy by crocopip part 3
Kurna! Moje drugie ja musiało się wygadać!!! Skoro się ujawniać, to już na całegocrocopip pisze:bo Kerimb i ja to jedna osoba<kerimb> pisze:Nigdy się nie ukrywałem, tak dla jasności. Pisałem zawsze tak samo i łatwo było stwierdzić, że ja to ja. Jeśli admin dotrzyma słowa, to tak już zostanie. Osiągnęliśmy kompromis i tyle w temacie.xpep pisze:widze ze sie kerimb coraz ambitniej ukrywasz
Ostatnio zmieniony 27 sie 2010, 09:42 przez <kerimb>, łącznie zmieniany 1 raz.
no właśnie stopy zatrzymały ruch. ale jak widać nie były zbyt wielkie. wiecxpep pisze:zmien to szybko bo szkoda ze Cie zbanowalicrocopip pisze:bo Kerimb i ja to jedna osoba
Winkkerim to juz sie przyzwyczail
no niely strzalcrocopip pisze:1.2763 przy tym impecie padnie jak (nie wiem co). powyżej 1.2833 i wolny lot do 1.290/3tylko czy to nie ciecie stopow?
to dobry kawałek na tą chwilę (swoją z puli moich ulubionych towarzyszących mi w grze)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BNWXddj_ ... re=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BNWXddj_ ... re=related
Ben Bernanke cast as Shane doesn't work
I struggle to see Ben Bernanke in the Alan Ladd role, riding across Wyoming's high plains looking to escape his past, but ending up the reluctant hero who saves the day.
It's not the beard, it's just that in fiction, Shane knows how to solve the problem of defending the hard-working farmers from the persecution of gun-toting ranchers – he just has to be prepared to go back to his gunman past. This year's Jackson Hole symposium centres on the theme ‘Macroeconomic Challenges: The Decade Ahead'. That says it all. The challengers facing policy-makers are huge, and structural. But central bankers can't agree on solutions. So Mr Bernanke is going to struggle to come up with prescriptive comments, although his own bias – dovish and proactive – will probably be clear.
We will write more after the event but assume that markets will spend today in a state of hiatus, reluctant to hold positions ahead of Jackson Hole, ahead of the end of the month and ahead of the release of major economic data next week in the form of US ISM and payroll reports. It is not a day for new positions, rather for old ones to be scaled back.
Our core underlying theme remains intact however. Whatever the world's leaders conclude in Jackson Hole, none of the G3 central banks wants a stronger currency and all three are committed to delaying the exit from extraordinarily accommodative monetary policy until the threat of deflation has faded. Credit growth remains exceptionally weak (even if the Eurozone M3 data this week were slightly upbeat). We look for fairly tight ranges to hold in USD/JPY and EUR/USD, and our main attention is on the relative attraction of currencies from outside this group whose central bankers are more inclined to be hawkish.
I struggle to see Ben Bernanke in the Alan Ladd role, riding across Wyoming's high plains looking to escape his past, but ending up the reluctant hero who saves the day.
It's not the beard, it's just that in fiction, Shane knows how to solve the problem of defending the hard-working farmers from the persecution of gun-toting ranchers – he just has to be prepared to go back to his gunman past. This year's Jackson Hole symposium centres on the theme ‘Macroeconomic Challenges: The Decade Ahead'. That says it all. The challengers facing policy-makers are huge, and structural. But central bankers can't agree on solutions. So Mr Bernanke is going to struggle to come up with prescriptive comments, although his own bias – dovish and proactive – will probably be clear.
We will write more after the event but assume that markets will spend today in a state of hiatus, reluctant to hold positions ahead of Jackson Hole, ahead of the end of the month and ahead of the release of major economic data next week in the form of US ISM and payroll reports. It is not a day for new positions, rather for old ones to be scaled back.
Our core underlying theme remains intact however. Whatever the world's leaders conclude in Jackson Hole, none of the G3 central banks wants a stronger currency and all three are committed to delaying the exit from extraordinarily accommodative monetary policy until the threat of deflation has faded. Credit growth remains exceptionally weak (even if the Eurozone M3 data this week were slightly upbeat). We look for fairly tight ranges to hold in USD/JPY and EUR/USD, and our main attention is on the relative attraction of currencies from outside this group whose central bankers are more inclined to be hawkish.

