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Morning TOUCAN, top of the morning to you.
The Economic Collapse Approaches, The Market Doomsday Clock Is One Minute To Midnight - Episode 743a
very low volume today. think we finally breakout tomorrow. also check out post #1646. a lot of call options bought eod too.
$TWTR Technical Analysis Video 8/17/2015
Forgot to add that the euroMarkets were down and these crazy US market divergences happened AFTER the euroMarkets closed and this occured for the second time in 4 sessions. Hmmmm...
Bonds up today (see the first link) and indices as well (see the second link)... this is not the first time this year and is totally crazy... they usually work as opposites and the $USD and PM's went up and they usually work as opposites... No conclusion can be made other than someone is propping up something in my view... still adding puts longer term in SPY.
http://finviz.com/futures_charts.ashx?t=BONDS&p=d1
http://finviz.com/futures_charts.ashx?t=INDICES&p=d1
http://finviz.com/futures_charts.ashx?t=CURRENCIES&p=d1
http://finviz.com/futures_charts.ashx?t=METALS&p=d1
re: all this points to Omid Kordestani being the new CEO of $TWTR
Link back... and connect the dots yourself.
re: Axiom's Anthony: Costolo Removal Puts Twitter Into Play, Google Is The 'Logical' Acquirer
June 12, 2015 11:16am
http://www.benzinga.com/analyst-ratings/analyst-color/15/06/5590249/axioms-anthony-costolo-removal-puts-twitter-into-play-go
Shares of Twitter Inc TWTR 0.1% are rallying in Friday’s session, up 1 percent. Former CEO Dick Costolo stepped down from the role last night.
Victor Anthony, an analyst at Axiom, believes Costolo stepping down puts the company into play.
Anthony rates the social media company at Hold alongside a targeted price of $45.
He notes, “We are positive on the CEO transition, we think the Board should consider a seasoned and accomplished executive within the technology space and that may require seeking someone outside the firm.” Anthony shares a few candidates that would be great -- in his opinion -- for the new role: Omid Kordestani of Google Inc GOOG, Tim Armstrong of AOL, Inc. NYSEAOL, and John Donahoe of eBay Inc
The new CEO, he added, should spend great efforts in pushing out product iterations at a fast pace. He suggested Google is the "logical" acquirer of Twitter, commenting it “would be a wise use of Google’s capital.” $GOOGL $TWTR
$TWTR lost its head of brand advertising to Pinterest as the company continues to hire amid plans to monetize its platform
Aug 17, 2015 at 1:48 pm EST
http://www.bidnessetc.com/50406-twitter-inc-brand-advertising-head-jumps-ship-for-pinterest/
$TWTR MoPub Sees Big Growth In Native Ads
7 minutes ago
http://techcrunch.com/2015/08/17/mopub-native-ad-stats/
GM cnvegas & traders
will take a look thank you.
Annotated Chart: Record Highs in the S&P100 is falling faster than an anvil out of a 747 at 33K feet:
Also see the 4 charts in the link below...
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=115760998
Good Morning TOUCAN.
I hope puts as on your mind for this week.
I'm starting my trading plan for trading the down side.
Like the Banks I see a tumble coming.
Bio tech. Gonna lose big.
Looking at K, CL, GIS, BA and BYD. All for puts.
A little slower trades. But once the start down they will make nice moves.
Would really like a small pop opening to help my entries.
GLTY today.
re: Looks like $GOOGL has a new advertising sales chief, Philipp Schindler, who replaces Omid Kordestani.
Meet Google’s New Money Man, Philipp Schindler
Aug. 17, 2015 9:07 PM PDT
By Amir Efrati
https://www.theinformation.com/meet-googles-new-money-man-philipp-schindler?shared=38161f
Amid the Alphabet-Google news last week, one major change went unnoticed: Google has a new sales chief, Philipp Schindler.
Mr. Schindler succeeds Omid Kordestani, Google’s chief business officer and a close confidant of Google co-founder Larry Page. Mr. Kordestani is departing as Mr. Page vacates his Google CEO post to run Google’s new parent company Alphabet.
Mr. Schindler's new role puts him in charge of Google’s more than 15,000-person sales organization, which has become more complex and challenged as the company matures.
The Takeaway
Google has a new sales chief, one of the most important non-product jobs in the Web industry. He confronts an era of increased competition for ad dollars and the challenges of mobile monetization.
In his mid-40s, Mr. Schindler will have one of the most lucrative non-CEO jobs in the Internet industry, worth tens of millions of dollars a year, depending on share price performance. It’s also a job that isn’t fully appreciated by much of Google’s workforce, which, like Mr. Page, prizes technical knowledge above all else and isn’t interested in the advertising business.
Mr. Schindler is known as a “hyper-logical” leader in the mold of longtime Google sales exec Dennis Woodside, who is now at Dropbox, and preaches the need to simplify Google’s advertising products with as much automation as possible, in keeping with the company’s ethos.
Slower growth
That includes processes like “upfront” ad sales for YouTube, in which ads are purchased far in advance, like TV ad sales. He is, however, much more personable and softer-edged than Mr. Woodside and Nikesh Arora, who preceded Mr. Kordestani and left Google last year, colleagues say.
Financially, Google’s had a good summer but the past couple of years have been marked by slower growth and concern that its best days have long passed, particularly as it focuses on areas outside of search advertising where competition is fiercer.
Mr. Schindler is known as a “hyper-logical” leader in the mold of longtime Google sales exec Dennis Woodside.
Front of mind for Mr. Schindler is how to compete with Facebook, which has shown strong display-advertising results and is increasingly fighting for video ad dollars of the kind that Google wants for YouTube. There are a host of other issues facing Google’s sales arm, which depends on Google’s consumer-product arm to get new users and thus more advertising inventory for the sales unit.
A 10-year Google vet with a German background, Mr. Schindler is known for being an avid skier. He spent about eight years in various ad sales roles at AOL, primarily in Europe. Most recently, he had been overseeing businesses like Google for Work, which includes the company’s Chromebook laptops for schools, and Google Apps, the software suite for businesses that includes Gmail and Google Drive.
He also oversaw advertising-support call centers and ads for small and medium businesses, which involves partnering with other companies that sell services to such businesses.
Sales Liaison
More importantly, he has been the sales arm’s liaison with with executives like Sridhar Ramaswamy who develop the advertising products used by Google’s ad customers. He talked to executives like Mr. Pichai about strategies to commercialize Google’s consumer products.
He had also been working closely with people like Lucas Watson, who is focused on attracting brand advertisers that want to boost awareness of their products to Google’s users (as opposed to performance marketers that want their ads to lead to immediate sales), a long-challenged initiative for Google and other Web companies. The other strategic area Mr. Schindler oversees is the sales unit involved with automated ad-buying platforms.
Last year, Mr. Arora gave way to Mr. Kordestani, who initially was expected to be temporary and pick a permanent leader. Mr. Schindler was the frontrunner to replace Mr. Arora, given that he had been Mr. Arora’s longtime protege. But Mr. Kordestani in October said he would stay permanently.
Mr. Schindler declined to comment for this article.
$TWTR
My pleasure!!!
thank you. Pro-Life
Hi Pro-Life,
yep. its about to get ugly soon.
Jim Willie Part 2: The Petro-Dollar Won't Collapse - It Will Vanish
According to CFTC data, banks are nearly 100% short bonds... amazing but not shocking... the banksters know the coming carnage...
http://www.cftc.gov/MarketReports/BankParticipationReports/deaaug15f
$TWTR Periscope Is On Fire
Aug. 16, 2015 8:12 PM ET
http://seekingalpha.com/article/3443366-twitter-periscope-is-on-fire
Thank you TOUCAN. I have traded both and like options a lot better.
"Deal Or War": Is Doomed Dollar Really Behind Obama's Iran Warning?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/16/2015 18:45 -0400
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-08-16/deal-or-war-doomed-dollar-really-behind-obamas-iran-warning
Authored Op-Ed by Finian Cunningham via RT.com,
US President Barack Obama has given an extraordinary ultimatum to the Republican-controlled Congress, arguing that they must not block the nuclear accord with Iran. It’s either “deal or war,” he says.
In a televised nationwide address on August 5, Obama said: “Congressional rejection of this deal leaves any US administration that is absolutely committed to preventing Iran from getting a nuclear weapon with one option: another war in the Middle East. I say this not to be provocative. I am stating a fact.”
The American Congress is due to vote on whether to accept the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action signed July 14 between Iran and the P5+1 group of world powers – the US, Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China. Republicans are openly vowing to reject the JCPOA, along with hawkish Democrats such as Senator Chuck Schumer. Opposition within the Congress may even be enough to override a presidential veto to push through the nuclear accord.
In his drastic prediction of war, one might assume that Obama is referring to Israel launching a preemptive military strike on Iran with the backing of US Republicans. Or that he is insinuating that Iran will walk from self-imposed restraints on its nuclear program to build a bomb, thus triggering a war.
But what could really be behind Obama’s dire warning of “deal or war” is another scenario – the collapse of the US dollar, and with that the implosion of the US economy.
That scenario was hinted at this week by US Secretary of State John Kerry. Speaking in New York on August 11, Kerry made the candid admission that failure to seal the nuclear deal could result in the US dollar losing its status as the top international reserve currency.
“If we turn around and nix the deal and then tell [US allies], ‘You're going to have to obey our rules and sanctions anyway,’ that is a recipe, very quickly for the American dollar to cease to be the reserve currency of the world.”
In other words, what really concerns the Obama administration is that the sanctions regime it has crafted on Iran – and has compelled other nations to abide by over the past decade – will be finished. And Iran will be open for business with the European Union, as well as China and Russia.
It is significant that within days of signing the Geneva accord, Germany, France, Italy and other EU governments hastened to Tehran to begin lining up lucrative investment opportunities in Iran’s prodigious oil and gas industries. China and Russia are equally well-placed and more than willing to resume trading partnerships with Iran. Russia has signed major deals to expand Iran’s nuclear energy industry.
American writer Paul Craig Roberts said that the US-led sanctions on Iran and also against Russia have generated a lot of frustration and resentment among Washington’s European allies.
“US sanctions against Iran and Russia have cost businesses in other countries a lot of money,” Roberts told this author.
“Propaganda about the Iranian nuke threat and Russian threat is what caused other countries to cooperate with the sanctions. If a deal worked out over much time by the US, Russia, China, UK, France and Germany is blocked, other countries are likely to cease cooperating with US sanctions.”
Roberts added that if Washington were to scuttle the nuclear accord with Iran, and then demand a return to the erstwhile sanctions regime, the other international players will repudiate the American diktat.
“At that point, I think much of the world would have had enough of the US use of the international payments system to dictate to others, and they would cease transacting in dollars.”
The US dollar would henceforth lose its status as the key global reserve currency for the conduct of international trade and financial transactions.
Former World Bank analyst Peter Koenig says that if the nuclear accord unravels, Iran will be free to trade its oil and gas – worth trillions of dollars – in bilateral currency deals with the EU, Japan, India, South Korea, China and Russia, in much the same way that China and Russia and other members of the BRICS nations have already begun to do so.
That outcome will further undermine the US dollar. It will gradually become redundant as a mechanism of international payment.
Koenig argues that this implicit threat to the dollar is the real, unspoken cause for anxiety in Washington. The long-running dispute with Iran, he contends, was never about alleged weapons of mass destruction. Rather, the real motive was for Washington to preserve the dollar’s unique global standing.
“The US-led standoff with Iran has nothing to do with nuclear weapons,” says Koenig. The issue is: will Iran eventually sell its huge reserves of hydrocarbons in other currencies than the dollar, as they intended to do in 2007 with an Iranian Oil Bourse? That is what instigated the American-contrived fake nuclear issue in the first place.”
This is not just about Iran. It is about other major world economies moving away from holding the US dollar as a means of doing business. If the US unilaterally scuppers the international nuclear accord, Washington will no longer be able to enforce its financial hegemony, which the sanctions regime on Iran has underpinned.
Many analysts have long wondered at how the US dollar has managed to defy economic laws, given that its preeminence as the world’s reserve currency is no longer merited by the fundamentals of the US economy. Massive indebtedness, chronic unemployment, loss of manufacturing base, trade and budget deficits are just some of the key markers, despite official claims of “recovery.”
As Paul Craig Roberts commented, the dollar’s value has only been maintained because up to now the rest of the world needs the greenback to do business with. That dependency has allowed the US Federal Reserve to keep printing banknotes in quantities that are in no way commensurate with the American economy’s decrepit condition.
“If the dollar lost the reserve currency status, US power would decline,” says Roberts. “Washington’s financial hegemony, such as the ability to impose sanctions, would vanish, and Washington would no longer be able to pay its bills by printing money. Moreover, the loss of reserve currency status would mean a drop in the demand for dollars and a drop in willingness to hold them. Therefore, the dollar’s exchange value would fall, and rising prices of imports would import inflation into the US economy.”
Doug Casey, a top American investment analyst, last week warned that the woeful state of the US economy means that the dollar is teetering on the brink of a long-overdue crash. “You’re going to see very high levels of inflation. It’s going to be quite catastrophic,” says Casey.
He added that the crash will also presage a collapse in the American banking system which is carrying trillions of dollars of toxic debt derivatives, at levels much greater than when the system crashed in 2007-08.
The picture he painted isn’t pretty: “Now, when interest rates inevitably go up from these artificially suppressed levels where they are now, the bond market is going to collapse, the stock market is going to collapse, and with it, the real estate market is going to collapse. Pension funds are going to be wiped out… This is a very bad situation. The US is digging itself in deeper and deeper,” said Casey, who added the telling question: “Then what’s going to happen?”
President Obama’s grim warning of “deal or war” seems to provide an answer. Faced with economic implosion on an epic scale, the US may be counting on war as its other option.
Welcome cnvegas,
yeah, I had this board for awhile, but, over the weekend changed the name and options only. I got tired of trading penny stocks, way to much dilution and bashers etc.
yes, please post any trading ideas you may have
How novel. Make your own board.
Open to all? Even off the wall trading ideas.
I'm sure you have seen my posts on OM.
Chinese Yuan Devaluation is an Act of War
$DIS to build ‘Star Wars Lands’ in Florida and California
http://bnonews.com/news/index.php/news/1241
Gold And Silver – Market Bottoming? Big Rally Imminent? Reality Check Says NO.
Posted on August 15, 2015
http://edgetraderplus.com/market-commentaries/gold-and-silver-market-bottoming-big-rally-imminent-reality-check-says-no
IMF: Yuan reforms could bring China 'quite close' to floating rate
WASHINGTON | By Howard Schneider
Aug 14, 2015 8:00pm EDT
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/08/15/china-imf-idUSL1N10P1VK20150815
Aug 14 Recent changes to how China manages its currency could bring the country "quite close to a float" in its exchange rate, a top International Monetary Fund official said on Friday in a review of the country's economy.
The new system in theory could allow the currency value to move as much as 10 percent a week and be close to a rate that markets might set on their own, Markus Rodlauer, the IMF's mission chief for China, said.
Authorities are still likely to intervene in currency markets for now, Rodlauer said, but "this lays the basis for greater flexibility. ... We don't expect a free-floating system tomorrow. We expect some continued management. But we hope it will gradually lead to more flexibility and a float within two to three years."
Rodlauer said that even with the decline of the yuan's value that followed introduction of the new system, the IMF feels the Chinese currency is no longer undervalued - an important acknowledgement on an issue that has roiled trade and political relations between China and the United States.
Rodlauer's comments came as the IMF released its annual review of China's economy, a report completed before the new currency policy was announced this week.
The IMF said China should allow its economy to continue slowing over the next year as it presses forward with more market-based reforms to its credit and financial systems.
China remains vulnerable to a financial shock, continues to run a large current account surplus, and could pose a risk to global growth if its continued transition to a market-based economy is not managed well, the IMF wrote.
The report follows a tumultuous year in which China's ebbing growth, plummeting demand for commodities and stock market volatility made the once roaring Asian giant seem scarily vulnerable.
Failure to continue needed financial and other reforms, the fund said, "continues to pose the biggest risk to the outlook. If realized, it could result over the medium term in a disorderly correction," - the "hard landing" that some analysts worry could damage the global economy or leave the country stranded at its current low level of per capita income.
The fund's annual report gave Chinese authorities positive marks for managing the recent slowdown of their economy, beginning to liberalize the financial system, and starting to curb some of the over-investment in real estate and other assets that are considered a risk to financial stability.
"China is transitioning to a new normal, with slower yet safer and more sustainable growth," the IMF said, noting that the country had slowed credit growth by more strictly regulating shadow banks, managed through a stock market downturn, and is gradually moving to more consumption-based growth as the IMF and others have recommended.
Over reliance on investment is considered a key risk in China, with local governments and banks investing heavily in real estate and other projects that may not be economically viable.
As the shift away from investment continues, the IMF said, the country should prepare for slower growth in the medium term. The IMF said officials should "calibrate" fiscal and other policies toward a growth rate of as little as 6 percent next year, compared with an estimated 6.8 percent this year and growth in excess of 10 percent before the 2007 global financial crisis.
Trouble in China has held down global commodity prices and posed a risk to growth in other countries, including the United States. While cheaper oil and copper helps consumers and producers, it has also bedeviled officials at the Federal Reserve and other central banks trying to forecast inflation.
$TWTR hold rating reiterated at Axiom Securities. $40.00 PT.
http://www.marketbeat.com/stocks/NYSE/TWTR/
$TWTR buy rating reiterated at Jefferies Group. $56 PT
http://www.marketbeat.com/stocks/NYSE/TWTR/
Americans Are Feeling The Economic Collapse As More People Turn To Food Banks - Episode 741a
$TWTR one of greatest products ever: McNamee
Roger McNamee, Elevation Partners, believes Twitter is very close to huge success if they make some changes. http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?video=3000407296
TWTR AH action HOD, next week looks good
Columbia Pacific Advisors, LLC appears to have added to its $TWTR position in the most recent quarter http://www.conferencecalltranscripts.org/summaryh/?id=1932241
$TWTR Technical Analysis Video 7/17/2015
BRIGHTFIELD CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLC appears to have added to its $TWTR position in the most recent quarter http://www.conferencecalltranscripts.org/summaryh/?id=1931924
$TWTR hold rating reiterated at SunTrust
http://www.marketbeat.com/stocks/NYSE/TWTR/
Kingdom Ridge Capital, LLC appears to have added to its $TWTR position in the most recent quarter http://www.conferencecalltranscripts.org/summaryh/?id=1930671
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