Beiträge von Eldorado

    PREDICTIONS FOR 9 MAY TO 13 MAY.


    GOLD


    This week gold will trade lower and may touch $418.50 (one and half percent from current levels). If it breaks $418.50, then it will further lose ground another one percent. Please therefore don’t buy thinking that gold has reached a low price. Since early this year, planetary positioning has consistently been against gold. That is why I haven’t given positive comments concerning it. However, this may change any time during the next month and I may recommend strong buying in gold.


    The upside target is $428.5, which means less than one percent from Friday closing. Except on Tuesday and Thursday, gold may remain positive but will not move high. However, don't trap yourself in a buying position. On Thursday you should sell your buying positions on rising.


    SILVER


    During this week, silver will have an uncertain trend and it may fall to $6.72 while the upside could be $7.14. While Monday will remain positive, it will however move down in the last hour of the trading session. Traders can take advantage of movements on both sides. One should sell when it rises above $7.05 and buy when it goes close to my projected price.



    My recommendation is that you do NOT buy gold and silver on their rising. The rise should be taken as a selling opportunity. 8o


    All side currencies will collapse this week; Rand, Peso, Rubble, Australian and News dollar. Other major currencies will also fall quite fast including the Yen, franc and Canadian dollar.


    I am still holding dollar index.

    Sorry guys,



    Nach einiger Ueberlegung bin ich zum Schluss gekommen das ich solange weiter mit Kommentaren und meistens Bilder hier erscheine weil mich eh keiner hoeren kann.
    Im Zeitalter der medien finde ich es sogar klasse. You can do 2 !


    I love creative people ! ;), I love myself !


    I don't care anymore......

    Die Mods sollen mal machen was sie machen muessen und jeder weiss wie man Bilder von mir ignorieren kann.


    Turn the bloody mouse wheel ! :D


    Ich suche nach keinen Streit aber kann mich jederzeit wehren wie jeder hier, was wir aber nicht wollen.



    Sanuk heisst auf Thai, Spass haben, wer hat das noch heute.?


    Wir wollen sachlich aber auch lustig sein, da gehoert auch der Wallenstein hinein oder ein Entertainer rein. :D


    Ihr habt ja bald eure ruhe, ich geh in Urlaub fuer einige Zeit. :))


    Live a let live, dass wollte ich nur mal laut sagen ....Alles in Massen ! :D

    valueman ;)


    Bilder und charts sprechen worte.
    Ohne diese waere es ja langweilig, IMHO.
    Nur Bla Bla ist nicht mein Geschmack, alles jedoch in Massen wie sonst alles im Leben. Gender Mainstream ?.... sage besser nicht viel drauf.
    Wen es nicht gefaellt der braucht nicht hinschauen, selbst nicht in einen Diskussionsforum nach Alt Deutscher Art. Dann noch manche die sagen, alles war frueher besser im vergleich... der oder die waren besser, etc. etc.machen aber nichts um es zu verbessern, diese besser -wisser. ;(


    Es gibt sogar eine Funktion im Profil wo man jedes Bild ausblenden kann von Beitraegen jeder Art.
    Wie waere es damit ?? (fuer leser die sich aufregen). Man geht auf Profil einstellung und dann Einstellungen editieren, und schon ist das ""Problem"" geloest.


    Gruesse und gleichzeitig willkomme ich jedes neue Mitglied die auch schreiben sollten,... nicht nur lesen. :(


    Ich verscheuche bestimmt keinen hier, denn alleine macht es genauso wenig Spass wie ohne Bilder, zwischendurch. :P


    Ueber Geschmack laesst sich natuerlich streiten, genauso wie mit der Wahl der Aktien und Art der Anlage. ?(


    Also schreibt, wer schreibt der bleibt ! :D

    In Afrika geht alles nur mit schmieren, das merkst du schon bei der Einreise in Nigeria, da muss ein 20 Dollar Schein im Pass sein sonst wird er einbehalten spaeter vom Hotel und du kannst nur dort Geld zum extra kurs wechseln. Ebenso wird so mit Boarding Paesse gehandelt wenn wieder ueberbucht wird, sonst bleibt man zurueck.

    Half of SA drivers 'unlicenced' 8o


    09/05/2005 11:07



    Johannesburg - More than half of South African drivers' licences are fraudulent or invalid, the department of transport said on Monday.
    Wendy Watson, a senior official of the department, cited procedural irregularities as the root of the problem.


    Much more still had to be done to weed out corrupt officials.


    She said in a statement that large numbers of forged and fraudulent foreign licences were flooding into the country and then being converted into valid South African licences.


    "Once we realised what was happening we demanded that a letter from the foreign licensing authority be issued to certify the validity of each foreign licence.


    "It is now becoming clear that these letters are also being forged - quite possibly by the same people who are forging the licences," Watson said.


    Ina van der Merwe, chief executive of the credentials verification company Kroll MIE, said almost 18% of all drivers' licences submitted for verification to her company turned out to be forged or fraudulent.


    Spiralling out of control


    "There has been a substantial year-on-year growth for the past five years indicating that the problem is spiralling out of control."


    Van der Merwe said horror truck and bus accidents over the past six months had "more than often" involved unlicensed people at the wheel, or drivers whose licences had been issued improperly.


    Watson said the department had "serious doubts about the driving abilities of a large percentage of South African drivers".


    "To that end the special investigations unit... has been making good progress in rooting out the rotten apples in licensing departments throughout the country."


    About 75 dedicated investigators were working to plug the loopholes being exploited by fraudsters.


    "We are very impressed by the work done by the unit so far and we feel certain that their investigators will get to the root of the problem and see to it that the guilty parties are prosecuted."


    News24/SAPA

    Ich weiss nicht ob ihr den kennt, ziemlich alt jedoch noch aktuell:


    LET THE GOOD TIMES ROLL :D


    Bill Bonner


    Foreign workers seem to be able to make anything we can make - but much cheaper...foreigners save their money...and these savings give them huge piles of capital with which to build more modern factories and more convenient infrastructure.


    What this means is that U.S. labor is suddenly over-priced. Americans' real hourly wages have gone nowhere in the last 30 years. They're likely to go nowhere in the next 30 years too - since so many jobs can be done overseas by much cheaper workers.


    While the foreigners got richer, U.S. passport holders became delusional. Let the Chinaman sweat, they said to each other. We'll think! This gargantuan conceit allowed Americans to sink into one of the most flattering fantasies the world has ever seen: That they could get richer without saving...or without really earning more money. Household debt soared to $10 trillion - 115% of earnings. After WWII, it was only 20% of earnings. Indeed, Americans came to think that the more they borrowed and spent, the richer they got.


    For a long while, it seemed almost to be true. The world's financial plumbing has become so curiously put together that the oddest things have been mistaken for commonplace. We turn on the stove and champagne fizzes out. We open the faucet and it runs with Kentucky bourbon; the whole thing is strange, but it doesn't take long to get to like it.


    The U.S. economy has been so strong for so long, people all over the world have come to accept its currency as though it were real money; they took it and asked nothing in return. In exchange for a shipment of TV sets, for example, the Japanese would take a wad of $100 bills and call it even. The bills tended to stay overseas - or they were used to buy another form of U.S. paper, Treasury bonds. The U.S. can print as many $100 bills as it wants. So can it issue as many bonds and notes as it pleases. As long as people don't try to exchange them for other forms of wealth - all is well.


    Until very recently, the foreigners seemed perfectly happy merely to hold the U.S. paper. They liked the feel of it. They felt richer and more secure with each bundle that came their way. By the end of 2004, they had racked up some $10 trillion worth - nearly $3 trillion more than Americans had of their assets. And because Americans continued to spend more than they made...each day the foreigners tossed nearly $2 billion more on the pile. Some began to wonder how they would eventually get rid of it - and at what price.


    One of the wonderers was, of course, poor Mr. Asakawa in Tokyo. The man controls the biggest stash of U.S. paper in the world. His life has come to imitate a popular joke. "A man who owes his banker $100,000 can't sleep at night," the joke begins. "But when a man owes his banker $1 million, it's the banker who can't sleep." Mr. Asakawa is the central banks' banker. He holds an estimated $700 billion worth of U.S. dollar-denominated paper assets in his vault. Beside his bed is a monitoring device that goes off like an alarm clock when the dollar falls out of a given trading channel. Mr. Asakawa, needless to say, does not sleep soundly.


    Something else is new in this new millennium. Not only does America face economic competition; it faces monetary competition too. Drug dealers and central bankers have a choice. They could just as well fill their stomachs and safes with euros as with dollars; besides, the higher-denomination euro bills are easier to swallow.


    We understood why Mr. Asakawa would be alarmed. What bothered us was why no one else seemed to be. With as much as $100 trillion of the world's wealth denominated in dollars, how did the world watch so complacently as the value of its main asset was marked down? The dollar went down. By 10%. Then 20%. And then 30%. When Warren Buffett began putting his money in euros, he could buy one for just 86 cents. Now, the euro costs nearly $1.36. In Europe, the dollar has lost about 40% of its purchasing power.


    Today, nearly all the experts agree: The dollar will continue to go down. But no seems to want to connect the hipbone to the thighbone. No one seems to want to look beyond the dollar's decline. Somehow, the dollar has been decoupled from almost all other financial transactions: it can go down while the assets it measures do not. The dollar falls; U.S. stocks and bonds go up. Go figure.


    We figure it is pretty strange. But we have become used to strange things in the financial world. One additional oddity, more or less, shouldn't make any difference. But there is something especially strange about this new strangeness.


    Here at The Daily Reckoning, at the beginning of the year, we thought we saw a tsunami coming. The dollar would collapse, we believed, under the weight of the twin deficits - trade and federal. The financial seabed would tremble, we believed....and the consequent tsunami could wash away capital values of everything that was in its path - bonds, stocks, real estate...everything. Investors, sunning themselves on the beach, would soon be underwater.


    We are masters of hyperbole. But even we couldn't seem to find words to match the impending doom. And yet, we might as well have been a black-frocked deacon standing on a pier in Long Beach, warning sailors that, coming ashore, they might be tempted by loose women and free booze. Never did such a warning fall upon such deaf ears. In the sailors' minds, as in investors, the risk could be hardly understated. A falling dollar would only make our products more saleable overseas. The trade deficit problem would be solved. The U.S. economy would boom. The foreigners would be happier than ever to hold U.S. dollar assets.


    Americans thought they had merely discovered another sailors' paradise - a Tahiti with women in grass skirts and liquor trickling down the rocks. For years, the kind strangers had offered merchandise at Everyday Low Prices, taken their I.O.U.s, in payment and used them to buy U.S. Treasury bonds - thus keeping U.S. lending rates exceedingly low. Then, just at the moment when the foreigners begin thinking about unloading some of this debt - which, as everyone knows, would be a disaster for the United States since - along comes a decline in the dollar. America's overseas debt burden is being marked down, day after day. Not only did Americans never have to make good on their overseas I.O.U.s, they never will have to. So you see, dear reader, the pessimists and doom-mongers were wrong again...there really is a free lunch, after all. Or so it would appear on the last day of Anno Domini, 2004.


    Let the good times roll.


    Best wishes for 2005,

    yoyo


    ""Wer zu frueh kauft den bestraft das Sonderangebot"".......


    Habe wir nun ein Sonderangebot ?
    Kommt drauf an ob wir es als eines sehen oder nicht.
    Meiner Meinung nach ja, heisst aber nicht ob ich recht habe.
    Die Zeit wird es zeigen ob es eines war oder nicht.


    Fuer manche ist es wie nach Weihnachten :D