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goldenequity
12-18-2018, 08:00 AM
It's time for your meds.
Roll up yer sleeve and take this recommended RP dose.


Ron Paul on CNBC: Market Meltdown Coming
yesterday

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BGtNB1fgGDk


This Is The Worst December For Stocks Since The Great Depression
https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2018-12-18/worst-december-stocks-great-depression

current
https://i33.servimg.com/u/f33/19/91/34/17/futur110.jpg

https://www.finviz.com/futures.ashx

goldenequity
12-18-2018, 08:05 AM
when money was real.... (well almost.)


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yOHGr8r5Cs4

Firestarter
12-18-2018, 08:56 AM
It’s not a question of “if” but only of “when” the next market crash will be orchestrated...

It’s a certainty that after the historically low interest rates, the Fed made the interest rates zero from 2008 until December 2015. This was in response to the crash of the inflated housing bubble that the Fed created with about 2 years of 1% interest rates. So this time the bubble has been inflated much more.
Trillions of dollars in cheap money have fuelled the second-longest economic expansion in U.S. history, as measured by GDP. The market has been rising for nearly a decade straight without a 20% correction. It’s unlikely that this will continue beyond July 2019, as there as a never been a longer rise in US history. By historical standards, the current bubble will be crashed likely before that time.

Since December 2015, the Fed has been steadily raising interest rates, roughly 0.25% per quarter. It’s just a matter of time that they will orchestrate a chain of events that could become the biggest crash in history, followed by a recession of major proportions.
Around 84% Fed interest rate-hiking (16 of the last 19 times) have ended in a crisis. See some of the examples in the chart below.
https://archive.is/loMBi/1a52ee2c19a649f9ff87c3b1d27ca799bba0e5dc.png

1929 Wall Street Crash - The Federal Reserve’s easy money policies of the 1920s, created an enormous stock market bubble. In August 1929, the Fed raised interest rates and only a few months later, the bubble burst on “Black Tuesday”, when the Dow Jones lost over 12%. Between 1929 and 1932, the stock market lost 86%.
1987 Stock Market Crash - In February 1987, the Fed withdrew liquidity from the market; this made interest rates rise. They continued this until the “Black Monday” crash in October 1987, when the S&P 500 lost 33% of its value.
Asia Crisis and LTCM Collapse – By a period of relatively low interest rates, a bubble was created. Then in the mid-1990s, Greenspan’s Fed raised rates. This time the crisis started in Asia, spread to Russia, and then hit the US, where markets fell over 20%.
Tech Bubble - Greenspan’s next rate-hike cycle helped to bust the tech bubble, which he’d helped to inflate with low interest rates. After the tech bubble burst, the S&P 500 was halved.
Subprime Meltdown and the 2008 Financial Crisis - In 2004, the Fed embarked on another rate-hiking cycle. When mortgages collapsed, financial institutions couldn’t keep up. This created a cascading crisis that nearly collapsed the global financial system. The S&P 500 fell by over 56%: http://patriotrising.com/this-is-how-the-everything-bubble-will-end/
(archived here: http://archive.is/loMBi)

Chester Copperpot
12-18-2018, 09:11 AM
theyll just go to negative interest rates next.