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Re: fuagf post# 176390

Sunday, 06/03/2012 7:39:25 AM

Sunday, June 03, 2012 7:39:25 AM

Post# of 575758
Look at this statement in a Reuters 'news' article on the Yahoo main page today....Not what you normally hear from the media but true...

"Stock market rallies in each of the past three years were fueled by combinations of massive central bank and government stimulus spending. That maybe the only hope for equities this year, too."



and this....

"I don't see any compelling reason to think that we are going to have any sustained recovery absent new fiscal, monetary stimulus, not only here in the United States but perhaps even more importantly elsewhere around the world," said Clark Yingst, chief market analyst at Joseph Gunnar.

Yingst said that signs of more stimulus may be a compelling reason to get bullish.

We will be "watching very closely for new fiscal and monetary stimulus from a variety of countries. I think the source will be important, I think the magnitude, the scope will be important," he said."




2009, 2010, 2011, and probably 2012 stock markets, which equals the banks and big corporations, kept afloat by Central Bank and Government Debt/Liquidity. Will these entities (banks and corps) suddenly reach some kind of critical mass and overcome the tremendous World OverDebt problem in 2013 or 2014 because the Central Planners poured on More Debt? Debt the citizens are directly responsible for and victims of via punnishingly low interest rates (on savings) and dilution of the currency (raising costs of food and energy the things we need and the things we own, like real estate, not allowed to go through price discovery) and crippling uncertainty (the money does not get loaned). Excessive Debt/Liquidity that has gone and goes into the pockets of the leverged HIGH RISK takers, who should instead, pay for the problem (by failure). Just asking?

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/wall-street-week-ahead-time-210044240.html

http://www.americanbanker.com/bankthink/uncertainty-crippling-bank-stocks-killing-mergers-and-acquisitions-1046951-1.html

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