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Wheat Technicals Breaking on USDA

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    #16
    fjlip . . . welcome to the world of
    negative interest rates if deflation
    really kicks in. This was Japan in the
    1990's. It is already present in the
    U.S. as fees effectively generate
    negative returns.

    There is no hope-in-hell (IMO) of higher
    interest rates for a long, long time.

    Central banks (like ours) threatening to
    hike rates is likely more a scare tactic
    to get consumers to rein in their debt.
    And if the BOC was actually serious,
    that is a scary thought of how out-of
    tune-politicians are on the global
    crisis.

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      #17
      So sky rocketing debt and near zero interest, what is the answer.
      Please, sir, don't spend?
      Banks must refuse to borrow perhaps?
      Credit limits reduced? No money in that idea.
      Saving is money losing value unless deflation reduces prices and goods get cheaper, that would look like appreciating buying power. Money in the bank or mattress could be king like in the 30's.
      Going to be interesting.

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        #18
        Japan is about to default on a quadrillion dollars of
        debt.

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          #19
          aussie wheat crop larger this usda
          report? go figure

          errol and charlie report it as they see
          it

          24 hours is a long time in the markets
          as they say if market is oversold it
          will respond this week or next i not may
          trend lower till next usda report in
          january is it?

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            #20
            Which of the two quadrillions do you mean
            cotton? 10 to the 24th or 15th?

            Comment


              #21
              fjlip . . . can tell by your questions that you get it.

              We are all in debt, but we all have to tread carefully here. Bullish mentality that farming is somehow immune to this crisis is a recipe for disaster in any operation.

              Cash rents are at ridoulous levels. Fertilizer costs are ridicoulous. Farmland prices are in a bubble. This will all change over times are markets run in cycles.

              Whenever an industry thinks they are bulletproof . . they aren't.

              Just ask cattle feeders. That industry was bulletproof just 18 months ago . . . .

              Errol

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                #22
                Errol I never agree ith you but yes you might be
                right, when you think your better than the rest
                your days are numbered.
                Rent
                Land
                Inputs
                Are all out to lunch.
                New problem pull some of these mega land deals
                some of our banks are the backers on stupid
                deals out their.

                Comment


                  #23
                  wd9, nice point! So either it's a quadrillion or a billiard? I think the North American terms will win out.

                  <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_and_short_scales"target=blank>Long and Short Scales</a>

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                    #24
                    I learned my "new thing of the day," from this thread.

                    I have never heard of the long scale before. Didn't know what the hell wd9 was going on about until I read boarderbloke's wiki link.

                    Thanks =:-)

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                      #25
                      Its an inconceivable amount of money
                      either way!

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