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kalua |
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Musafir ![]() |
Nu stiu daca topicul asta se incadreaza bine la cariera si afaceri, dar fiind vorba de bani cred ca aici e cel mai bine.
Ati jucat, jucati? Eu nu, dar dragul meu s-a ocupat si cu asa ceva, chiar fara agent. Principiile lui: - banii investiti trebuie sa fie "bani de joc", adica in plus, care sa nu ruineze pe nimeni daca se pierd - bursa trebuie controlata de n ori pe zi pentru a remarca trendurile - e bine de avut cat de cat intelegere pentru businessul firmei in care se baga banii pentru a intelege ce sau ce alte firme i-ar putea ridica sau scadea valoarea bursiera. |
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moderator ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: V.I.P. Posts: 6,061 Joined: 8-December 05 From: Montreal Member No.: 34 ![]() |
despre cutremurul de pe Wall street de saptamana asta
banca Lehman Brothers da faliment, Merrill Lynch e cumparata de Bank of America si AIG primeste un ajutor care-i va costa enorm am gasit un articol interesant care explica motivele crizei Most pundits agree that the financial distress on Wall Street will soon hit Main Street. But to figure out where the crisis is going to end it’s important to first understand where it began. The crisis started with banks lending as much as possible to as many people as possible, throwing standards out the window. The money was mostly used to buy houses in a real estate market that was white hot. (Remember, people were rushing to buy, sometimes paying premiums, because prices were rising so rapidly.) That held for a while, until homeowners in California and Florida and then the rest of the nation started to fall behind on their mortgage payments. By that time, those mortgages had been bundled and sold -- then sold again and again -– as very complex financial instruments that looked extremely profitable but were actually toxic. When they went bad, those questionable mortgages were held by a wide range of firms, including some of the Wall Street’s storied investment banks. And now three of them -- Bear Stearns, Merrill Lynch, and Lehman Brothers -- have been obliterated. The aftermath will be felt well beyond lower Manhattan. Their collapse signals a sea change for this country's financial system with every American vulnerable to its effects. Banks will likely hesitate to loan money to anyone but the most upstanding borrowers. That translates into less money going into the system for homes, cars, TVs and even microwave ovens. http://www.cnbc.com/id/26727015 |
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Lo-Fi Version | Time is now: 19th June 2025 - 02:16 PM |
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