• You will need to login or register before you can post a message. If you already have an Agriville account login by clicking the login icon on the top right corner of the page. If you are a new user you will need to Register.

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

A Game-Changing Crash . . . .

Collapse
X
Collapse
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    Money in bank right now seems dangerous

    Cash under your pillow could go to zero

    Gold in your hand could be confiscated and is hard to liquidate when the time to jump back in is.

    Commercial shopping Centers and restaurants going to get killed in this. Entertainment complexes too.

    Oil down almost 10% today OMG, Could he setup for worst Monday ever.

    Comment


      Originally posted by Ache4Acres View Post
      Money in bank right now seems dangerous

      Cash under your pillow could go to zero

      Gold in your hand could be confiscated and is hard to liquidate when the time to jump back in is.

      Commercial shopping Centers and restaurants going to get killed in this. Entertainment complexes too.

      Oil down almost 10% today OMG, Could he setup for worst Monday ever.
      The Canadian economy was on life support before this. We need a liquidity injection stat. Negative rates and helicopter money ought to fix it right? right? 🙈
      Last edited by biglentil; Mar 6, 2020, 23:49.

      Comment


        Originally posted by jazz View Post
        There is a rumour floating on the interwebs that the US will attempt a return to a partial gold standard, part fiat and perhaps some sort of crypto blockchain backing.
        The way things are going the last few days, it looks like toilet paper is soon to be the next currency!



        For those that like to stretch a nickel, you'll notice buddy here is literally throwing 2 extra sheets of currency down the drain each BM.

        Comment


          Click image for larger version

Name:	Screenshot_20200307-132106_Twitter.jpg
Views:	1
Size:	106.8 KB
ID:	769441

          Glad I don't have to personally witness this at Costco. The cherry on top is the women in the background rubbing her nose with a gloved hand.
          Last edited by biglentil; Mar 7, 2020, 16:22.

          Comment


            Originally posted by biglentil View Post
            [ATTACH]5676[/ATTACH]

            Glad I don't have to personally witness this at Costco. The cherry on top is the women in the background rubbing her nose with a gloved hand.
            Looks like 2 bottles of ranch dressing and a box of chimichangas is the priority

            Comment


              Everyone was shitting themselves that the US 10yr treasury dropped briefly to a 6 handle on friday. In overnight it grabbed a 4 handle for a short period of time.

              0.495%, currently running 0.523%
              https://www.investing.com/rates-bonds/u.s.-10-year-bond-yield https://www.investing.com/rates-bonds/u.s.-10-year-bond-yield

              Dow futures down -4.15%
              S&P futures down -4.59%
              nikkei down -4.75%
              wti down -22.5%
              brent down -22%

              Will the fed let these numbers hit the board at open or are they going to expend more ammo?

              Comment


                Global equity markets getting destroyed tonite . . . South Korea, Japan, Australia, India appear in double-digit losses. Erupting oil price war taking massive toll. Defaults inevitable.

                Monday, March 09, 2020 may go down in-history . . . .

                Comment


                  Originally posted by errolanderson View Post
                  Global equity markets getting destroyed tonite . . . South Korea, Japan, Australia, India appear in double-digit losses. Erupting oil price war taking massive toll. Defaults inevitable.

                  Monday, March 09, 2020 may go down in-history . . . .
                  Headlines always try to connect a cause to an effect, but can you possibly explain why South Korea, Japan, Australia and India, all of which import most of their large oil needs, would be suffering from an oil price war? They don't like paying low prices?

                  Comment


                    Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View Post
                    Headlines always try to connect a cause to an effect, but can you possibly explain why South Korea, Japan, Australia and India, all of which import most of their large oil needs, would be suffering from an oil price war? They don't like paying low prices?

                    Reckon earl mean the whole stock market

                    Comment


                      Incredible market movement tonite . . . .

                      S & P INDEX FUTURES LOCK LIMIT DOWN @ 2,819

                      COONC in Hong Kong down 22 percent tied to oil price crash

                      U.S. 10-year treasuring yields break below 0.5 percent.

                      Comment


                        I am surprised to see the VIX at 41.94. Maybe today it’ll hit 50-60-70.

                        Comment


                          The chain reaction from this has only just begun, next "should be" EM bonds blow. Contagion sets in as the vultures look for the next country or sector to default. "The cure of the last crisis is causation of the next" which is debt. It could be very difficult getting financing this spring as the issuer will not be able to spin it off into derivatives. Rates are going drastically higher im afraid. Santander, the Spanish bank that does a pile of sub prime auto loans here in Canada is -12% at present. We will never see "everyone is approved" again. French banks have heavy exposure to oil, SG currently -15%
                          Last edited by macdon02; Mar 9, 2020, 06:43.

                          Comment


                            So much for the 50 point cut that Fed implemented on the 3rd of march. Rate cuts arent enough. Weimer style money printing coming up next, ready the wheel barrels.

                            Comment


                              Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View Post
                              Headlines always try to connect a cause to an effect, but can you possibly explain why South Korea, Japan, Australia and India, all of which import most of their large oil needs, would be suffering from an oil price war? They don't like paying low prices?
                              Price war aside, oil prices are a proxy for the economy. Usually low prices equate less economic activity, not more. Its the one measurement that is counter intuitive. So much of oil use is linked to major transportation, cargo, goods.

                              But on the bright side we get to see a world without FF and the benefits from that. I suspect we will meet our emissions targets this year now. Only took shutting down the global economy.

                              Comment


                                Originally posted by biglentil View Post
                                So much for the 50 point cut that Fed implemented on the 3rd of march. Rate cuts arent enough. Weimer style money printing coming up next, ready the wheel barrels.
                                I highly suspect there will be a bailout package for select industries now, airlines but maybe even energy, banks might get recapitalized again. Probably QE again to try and flip the yield curve.

                                But money in directly in the peoples hands will never happen.

                                Comment

                                • Reply to this Thread
                                • Return to Topic List
                                Working...