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how sweet it is
will be all over it
we shall seeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee what happens
you could be right
should get veeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeery interesting here
HMMMMMMMMMM. Can't wait to see what happens. HMMMMMMMMMM again
just get ready to change the ibox. lol
rico did not rs this for nothing. i will bet he will rm a company in it and run the hell out of it. bookmark this post
SEMION MOGILEVICH
Fraud by Wire; RICO Conspiracy; Mail Fraud; Money Laundering Conspiracy; Money Laundering; Aiding and Abetting; Securities Fraud; Filing False Registration With the SEC; False Filings With the SEC; Falsification of Books and... more ?
REWARD: The FBI is offering a reward of up to $100,000 for information leading directly to the arrest of Semion Mogilevich.
Semion Mogilevich is wanted for his alleged participation in a multi-million dollar scheme to defraud thousands of investors in the stock of a public company incorporated in Canada, but headquartered in Newtown, Bucks County, Pennsylvania, between 1993 and 1998. The scheme to defraud collapsed in 1998, after thousands of investors lost in excess of 150 million U.S. dollars, and Mogilevich, thought to have allegedly funded and authorized the scheme, was indicted in April of 2003.
Mogilevich may wear facial hair to include a moustache. He is known to be a heavy smoker. Mogilevich has his primary residence in Moscow, Russia. He is known to utilize a Russian passport, but may also possess Israeli, Ukrainian, and Greek passports.
https://www.fbi.gov/wanted/topten
complete joke
Rapid Fire Marketing (RFMK)
0.0001 ? -0.0001 (-50.00%)
Volume: 866,526,070 @ 4:15:54 PM ET
Bid Ask Day's Range
0.0001 0.0001 0.0001 - 0.0002
from today
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ COMING, NO FINES
WHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAT
lucky guess?
not anymore.
i agree with you and that's his problem. it's called karma.
i know all about it.
i know who you are talking about and he is not a financier and he went to jail for domestic violence,not stock related. he also bailed himself out. i am not sticking up for him or defending him whatsoever but tell it as it is.
i disagree but we will see how it plays out
that has nothing to do with telcocuba or sugo. it names all the culprits and it's just fines
GO TAUG-SETH GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
$298.36 5.10%?
Change$14.48?Market Cap$4.272BTotal BTC14,317,450Today's Open$283.88Today's High$298.47Today's Low$282.48
Bitcoin Price Index Chart
http://www.coindesk.com/price/
gotcha
USD
CNY
http://www.coindesk.com/price/
How is this calculated?
$285.23 6.38%?
Change$17.11?Market Cap$4.084BTotal BTC14,317,450Today's Open$268.11Today's High$291.98Today's Low$267.69
Bitcoin Price Index Chart
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Jul 9, 2015toJul 10, 2015Export18:0010. Jul06:0012:00$265$270$275$280$285$290$295201120122013201420151h12h1d1w1m3m1yAll
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Bitcoin Price News
shutterstock_197244749
Feature
Is Greece Really Behind Bitcoin's Latest Price Surge?
Jun 18, 2015 at 20:15 | Pete Rizzo
The price of bitcoin broke out this week, spiking to a high of $257 on 17th June in what amounted to a jolt of life for the bitcoin economy.
Whale Club
Feature
Whale Club: The Trading Room That Loves Bitcoin Price Declines
Mar 17, 2015 at 20:23 | Pete Rizzo
CoinDesk examines the controversy and culture surrounding Whale Club a group reviled for perceived shadowy market practices and lauded by exchanges.
CoinDesk BPI price chart March 2-8 2015.
Feature
Markets Weekly: Bitcoin Price Holds Firm Following Volume Growth
Mar 9, 2015 at 14:15 | Joon Ian Wong
The bitcoin price continues to trade well above the $250 mark as trading volumes grow on global exchanges including Bitfinex and Huobi.
Picture 6
Feature
Is $518 the Fair Price of Bitcoin?
Mar 2, 2015 at 18:25 | Pete Rizzo
ALFAquotes has launched a Fair Bitcoin Price indicator to illuminate the value of bitcoin when factoring its cost of production.
Mar 2 - coindesk-bpi-chart (1)
Feature
Markets Weekly: Bitcoin Price Rallies Amid Positive Newsflow
Mar 2, 2015 at 12:26 | Joon Ian Wong
The bitcoin price spike over the last four days, which saw it gain 12% to hit a high of nearly $262, has been attributed to positive newsflow.
bitstamp resumes services
Feature
Markets Weekly: Price Jumps $50 in Four Days of Trading
Feb 16, 2015 at 13:23 | Joon Ian Wong
The bitcoin price jumped $50 in four days of trading, but settled back below the $250 mark after crossing the threshold in earlier trading.
Coindesk BPI feb2-8 2015
Feature
Markets Weekly: Slow Week for Bitcoin Price as 'Grexit' Looms
Feb 9, 2015 at 14:23 | Joon Ian Wong
Bitcoin traded sideways over the last week, with the price largely unchanged, as the wider macro-economy awaits a possible Greek Eurozone exit.
Feb 2 - coindesk-bpi-chart (1)
Feature
Markets Weekly: Bitcoin Price Drops as Coinbase Euphoria Wanes
Feb 2, 2015 at 14:56 | Joon Ian Wong
Following a price spike on major announcements from Coinbase two weeks ago, the bitcoin price has fallen back below $250.
Market chart
Feature
Markets Weekly: Price Crosses $300 Following Coinbase News
Jan 26, 2015 at 13:37 | Joon Ian Wong
While the bitcoin price may have taken a beating recently, it appears to be bouncing back, having crossed the $250 and $300 mark in quick succession.
Coins, accounting
Markets Weekly: Seeking Answers After The Crash
Jan 19, 2015 at 12:12 | Joon Ian Wong
The bitcoin price crashed below $200 last week, leaving market watchers trying to figure out just what had happened.
Bitcoin Price Calculator
The price of bitcoin can be expected to rise to $400 over the next 12 months, according to a new report by Wedbush Securities.?
http://www.coindesk.com/wedbush-report-projects-400-bitcoin-price-by-2016/
http://www.coindesk.com/wedbush-report-projects-400-bitcoin-price-by-2016/
it's all one big, rigged ponzi scheme
Excellent post. One of the best that I have ever read. Brillant
A MUST READ AND WATCH
http://www.cnbc.com/id/102816266
Pleasant Kids, Inc. (PLKDD)
0.0011 ? -0.0039 (-78.00%)
Volume: 292,108 @ 11:00:49 AM ET
Bid Ask Day's Range
0.001 0.005 0.003 - 0.004
GM AB's
bvap will be fine.
Bitcoin Price Index (24h)
Last updated on Jul 5, 2015 at 21:11 BST. Based on the following values:
USD
BTC-e $266.85
Bitstamp $271.06
OKCoin $271.65
Bitfinex $271.49
CNY
OKCoin ¥1,679.05
BTC China ¥1,683.66
Huobi ¥1,661.28
$259 $265 $272
USD 3.81%
$270.26
CNY 4.25%
¥1,674.66
EUR
€244.43
GBP
£173.68
http://www.cnbc.com/id/102809791
Day of reckoning for Greek banks and euro zone’s central banker
Jack Ewing and James Kanter
5 Hours Ago
The New York Times
No matter which way the Greek vote goes, the European Central Bank on Monday will face a series of agonizing decisions. Greece's future in the eurozone may well depend on how far the central bank is willing to go to prop up struggling Greek banks and prevent a total economic collapse.
If Greeks vote yes — agreeing to accept unpopular dictates from other eurozone nations and international creditors in return for more aid — the central bank would have a much easier time justifying emergency loans and other steps to keep the banks from failing. No economy can function properly without banks; if they topple, so will the economy.
A woman talks to a police officer as she waits outside a national Bank branch, as banks only opened for pensioners to allow them to get their pensions, with a limit of 120 euros.
LOUISA GOULIAMAKI | AFP | Getty Images
A woman talks to a police officer as she waits outside a national Bank branch, as banks only opened for pensioners to allow them to get their pensions, with a limit of 120 euros.
But if Greeks vote no, Mario Draghi, the president of the E.C.B., may be confronted with a difficult choice. The central bank's rules would probably require it to stop providing cash to Greek banks. But Mr. Draghi might be tempted to find a way around those rules, because choking off financial support would thrust untold hardship upon ordinary Greeks and might send the country on its way out of the euro currency union.
Either way the situation is tricky, and there are no precedents to rely on.
"It's fair to say we can expect a few surprises in the next few days," said Nicolas Véron, a senior fellow at Bruegel, a research organization in Brussels. "Clearly, we are in uncharted territory."
The E.C.B.'s Governing Council is expected to hold a conference call Monday to discuss Greek banks in light of the election results. If Greeks vote no — rejecting further austerity measures, even though that could mean no further bailout help — the central bank might focus its energy on minimizing the collateral damage elsewhere in the 19-nation eurozone. One way to do that would be to pump money into the bloc's economy by stepping up the central bank's purchase of government bonds, and other debt, from other eurozone countries.
But for Greece, its banks pose the clearest immediate danger. For months, they have depended on the E.C.B.'s emergency loans to compensate for withdrawals of money by Greeks who are worried that their government would be unable to reach a bailout agreement with its creditors.
The extent of that dependency became clear last week after the central bank decided to cap the emergency loans at about 89 billion euros, or about $99 billion. Because much of that credit line had already been used, the borrowing cap forced the government to close the banks before they ran completely out of money.
Under central bank rules, no emergency loans may be made to insolvent banks. If Greeks vote no, it will be hard for Mr. Draghi and the Governing Council to maintain the pretense that Greek banks are solvent. For one thing, the banks have large holdings of Greek government bonds, which have already plunged in value and would probably fall further.
Read More › Greek banks may not re-open any time soon
Mujtaba Rahman, the Europe director for the Eurasia Group, a political risk consultancy, wrote in a briefing note on Friday that a no vote by Greeks would probably tilt the balance of opinion on the Governing Council in favor of members from Germany, Latvia and other eurozone countries that want to take a hard line with Greece.
But the E.C.B. is treading carefully. It does not want to take the blame for any economic or humanitarian chaos that might ensue if Greek citizens choose to reject a deal with creditors.
Even if Greeks vote yes, banks may not reopen Tuesday as the government has promised. The banks have only about €1 billion, or $1.1 billion, on hand, Louka Katseli, the head of Greece's banking association, said on Friday.
But a yes vote would improve the chances that Greece could negotiate a new aid package with the other eurozone countries and its other main creditor, the International Monetary Fund.
Those prospects could make it easier for the E.C.B. to justify an increase in emergency lending, perhaps allowing the banks to reopen soon, or at least continue dispensing limited amounts of cash. (Since last Monday's bank closure, the daily A.T.M. withdrawal limit for people with Greek bank cards has been €60, or about $67.)
When the Greece government's debt problems became evident during the financial crisis, leading to international bailouts of the country in 2010 and 2012, one big worry was that other European banks could be dragged down by losses on their Greek holdings.
<p>Will the ECB support Greek banks?</p> <p>Vincent Juvyns, global market strategist at JP Morgan, discusses the situation in Greece ahead of this weekend's bailout referendum.</p>
By now, though, as European banks have sold off their Greek investments and new eurozone banking regulations have been put in place, that risk has been greatly reduced, according to the European Banking Federation, an industry trade group.
"European banks in recent years have significantly reduced their exposures to Greece, greatly limiting the risk of contagion through the banking system to other countries," the British bank Barclays wrote in a briefing note on Friday.
More from the NYT:
Bailout Referendum Lays Bare Deep Schisms Among Beleaguered GreeksAs
Referendum Looms, Greece's Tourism Industry Holds Its Breath
Mindful of Greece, Ukraine Is in a Rush to Line Up Debt Relief
Barclays said that other euro countries had exposure to Greece amounting to only 3.5 percent of the eurozone's gross domestic product and that exposure of European banks to Greece had fallen to less than one-tenth of that level.
But Barclays warned that the safeguards put in place the last five years were not "infallible."
Even if the E.C.B. and other eurozone countries decide that Greece's banks deserve a rescue, the process would be far from painless.
The central bank's emergency loans would not be a permanent solution. The longer-term fix would probably need to come from a war chest called the European Stability Mechanism that the eurozone countries set up during the financial crisis to guard against future calamities.
That fund was used in 2012 and 2013 to lend €41 billion, or about $45.5 billion, to the Spanish government to help rebuild the assets of Spain's banking system, which was teetering toward collapse. It was also used the next year to lend €9 billion, or about $10 billion, to Cyprus; some of those funds were used for its banks.
In the case of Cyprus, there were howls of protest when a eurozone bank bailout for the first time required some depositors to take "haircuts," or losses on their money.
But two years later, as the new Cypriot government that came to power during the crisis had met the bailout conditions set by the eurozone and the I.M.F., that solution has been deemed largely successful.
If a yes vote prevails in Greece, and the country — perhaps with a new government — can come to terms with its creditors, a Cyprus-style bank bailout might be part of the package. That is the view of Daniel Gros, the director of the Centre for European Policy Studies, a research organization in Brussels.
"There would certainly have to be a quid pro quo," Mr. Gros said, "and I'm almost certain that there would have to be some haircutting."
likewise
we shall see what happens gtg