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As Cotton mentioned

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    As Cotton mentioned

    http://www.adelaidenow.com.au/business/economy/chinese-chaos-worse-than-greece/story-fnkjjouo-1227430761673?sv=ead9ada95fad5d4b0b7ad85551dc9976

    Every day its in the business pages here

    #2
    https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2188rank.html#ca
    Lots of facts here.

    Comment


      #3
      Will be interesting to see how it plays out. China's stimulus plan was bigger then the us Europe and Japan's put together so there must be massive risk to their banking system but it's all clandestine state run shit show so maybe they can pull a rabbit out of the hat easier.

      Comment


        #4
        Cotton since you're always looking for the ethical short term trade I would recommend YANG.
        Mig is a lock

        Comment


          #5
          Cotton since you're always looking for the ethical short term trade I would recommend YANG.
          Mig is a lock

          Comment


            #6
            You flipping Chinese stocks Iceman?

            Comment


              #7
              Oliver88, This isn't a long term one. Over a week is probably too long. I normally hold these 2 or 3x ETFs way too long. A lot like spraying fungicide on a shitty lentil crop trying to protect all those 15bus. The trick is not to get greedy.

              Out

              Comment


                #8
                Four charts I am following. All are still holding in a trading range - albeit at support. The question will be when all four break lower.

                [URL="http://www.farms.com/markets/?page=chart&sym=YMU15&domain=farms&display_ice=1&e nabled_ice_exchanges=&studies=Volume;&cancelstudy= &a=W"]DJIA weekly[/URL]

                <a href="http://www.farms.com/markets/?page=chart&sym=CLQ15&domain=farms&dis play_ice=1&enabled_ice_exchanges=&studies= Volume;&cancelstudy=&a=W">crude oil weekly</a>

                <a href="http://www.farms.com/markets/?page=chart&sym=D6U15&domain=farms&dis play_ice=1&enabled_ice_exchanges=&studies= Volume;&cancelstudy=&a=W">loonies weekly</a>

                <a href="http://www.farms.com/markets/?page=chart&sym=E6U15&domain=farms&dis play_ice=1&enabled_ice_exchanges=&studies= Volume;&cancelstudy=&a=W">Euro weekly</a>

                Comment


                  #9
                  I would am also following the other members of BRIC - Brazil, Russia and India.

                  Russia as an example - Economic health, role as a supplier of energy to Europe and Geopolitical goals.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    I don't know why the situation reminds me of a Bob Dylan song from youth/the Vietnam protest era. Here is the link to the words.

                    [URL="http://www.lyricsfreak.com/b/bob dylan/the times they are a changin_20021240.html"]the times they are a changin[/URL]

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Crap spilling over onto commodities. Food was holding against copper nd oil. May take a kickin here.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        And yet China will find a way to pay for the grain they need.

                        And the west will again be saying wtf as they find out the crop sold for a low price while the Chinese resell the commodities for more.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Canadian grain market is joined at the hip to the US market.
                          Doesn't matter what the loonie is doing,
                          US dollar up-Canadian grains down.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Seems odd to have another excuse as to why we can't have higher grain prices in canada.

                            The loonie is dropping and so are grain prices.

                            I will put money on the fact that canadian produced fertilizer doesn't get the same treatment as canadian produced grain.

                            Both are commodities, funny how they are both produced in canada but have different pricing formulas.

                            Comment

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