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| Y si te lo planteas para dentro de 3 semanas, vuelos a 18 euros, ida y vuelta, con Ryanair (Girona-Charleroi). Poco mas de 50 euros entonces. Lo que pagas de mas por una onza en España. Es posible que vaya el proximo mes, pero para pasar un fin de semana largo y visitar la ciudad. Saludos |
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| Deseo vender las sgtes. monedas, oferta valida hasta agotar existencias. Filarmonica de Oro, 1 oz Pureza 999,9/1000 641€ c/u Panda China 2008, 1 oz 999/1000 679€ c/u Filarmonica de Plata, 1 oz 14€ c/u Cualquier consulta o duda o reserva en mi email: ee5349z@yahoo.es o un MP. Solo acepto transferencia bancaria, también vendo en ebay en subasta, pero generalmente a unos precios sensiblemente superiores.
__________________ Última edición por ee5348z; 15-nov-2008 a las 06:18 |
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| Five tips to beat the danger of deflation Five tips to beat the danger of deflation With a 20% chance of falling prices setting in, we look at ways for savers to beat the bad news Kathryn Cooper One in five savings accounts will pay less than 1% if this month’s rate cut is passed on in full, with many getting close to zero. The Bank of England is expected to slash rates further after its November inflation report raised the spectre of deflation — a damaging spiral of falling prices that has kept the Japanese economy in the doldrums for nearly two decades. Few economists expect the situation in Britain to get as bad as in Japan, although even a short period of falling prices would be hard for the economy: consumers won’t spend and will get little reward for saving. The Bank’s inflation report showed the consumer prices index, the government’s preferred measure of inflation, falling from 5.2% to just 1% in 2010, with a 20% chance that it will fall below zero. John Higgins of the consultancy Capital Economics said: “Deflation is not always bad news. It is important to distinguish between a relatively short period of negative inflation due to the unwinding of a commodity-price shock, and a more sustained period of generally falling prices and wages that can result from a debt deflationary spiral. For now we only expect the first.” We offer some tips. Fix your savings now Banks and building societies have been slow to react to this month’s 1.5 percentage point cut in Bank rate, with mostly tracker savings deals having fallen so far. Lloyds, for example, cut rates on its Easy Saver 2010 by 1.5 points from November 6, even though its mortgage trackers do not drop until next month. Meanwhile, Kaupthing Edge savers, whose accounts are now owned by ING, are earning just 4.55% on variable accounts compared with 6.55% when their accounts were transferred over. The average rate on a no-notice account with a £50,000 balance is just 3.44% before November’s cut. If the reduction is passed on in full, the average will drop to 1.94% with 20% of accounts paying less than 1%, said data firm Moneyfacts. Halifax’s popular Liquid Gold account already pays only 0.25% and the bank hasn’t decided what to do following November’s move — it said there was nothing to stop it cutting the rate to zero. Japan’s experience gives us some clues. “Savings rates on bank deposits never went negative, but they did in effect disappear — rates were as close to zero as makes no difference,” said Robert Brook of SG Asset Management. You can still get decent rates if you act fast. Halifax’s Guaranteed Reserve offers 6.01% fixed for six months on £25,000. Buy bonds Deflation is generally good news for government and corporate bonds because they pay a fixed income, which becomes more attractive as interest rates fall. Higgins said: “Deflation, and the policy response that it elicits, should be music to bondholders’ ears. Our expectation is that 10-year UK gilt yields will tumble to just 3% next year.” That implies prices will gain 8% or 9%, as prices rise when yields fall. Investors taking a long-term view could even look at index-linked gilts. Mike Fosberry of the broker Smith & Williamson said: “Although deflation could threaten the economy in 2009, it is arguably more likely that inflation will be the issue longer term.” Darius McDermott of Chelsea Financial Services thinks corporate-bond funds offer even better value. They are yielding up to 13% as prices have fallen on default fears. He likes L&G Dynamic Bond, yielding 6%, and Henderson Strategic Bond, at 7.8%. Buy equities — selectively While falling interest rates are generally good for shares because they cut the cost of consumer and corporate debt, deflation is a different story. Companies are unable to put up prices, meaning earnings suffer. If you take the view that deflation will be only short-lived, however, advisers said now could be a good time to buy equities. McDermott said: “I have never seen yields on equities like it. M&S is providing a dividend of 8.8%, BP 5.7%, HSBC 8.1% and Vodafone 6.9% — even if returns remained level you would be receiving up to three times more than the rate given on cash deposits at your building society.” Get out of sterling Most brokers think the pound could fall further — possibly to $1.40 or even $1.38. Second homeowners could also find euro repayments costlier and should consider fixing their exchange rate — although it may be close to the bottom. Don’t bank on gold The yellow metal, currently $747, could lose its shine. Higgins said: “Deflation does not augur well for an asset that is supposed to be an inflation-hedge. We expect prices to fall to $550 next year.” (430 euros!!!) We fear falling rates The prospect of plunging savings rates is a huge concern for young professionals Adam Smith and Elanor Simonis. Smith, 23, a surveyor, and Simonis, 22, a recruitment consultant, from Islington, north London, are saving for a deposit on their first home — and are hoping to buy in a year’s time. They are at present earning interest of 6% in a regular savings account with Lloyds TBS. “If that’s cut, it will be a worry,” he said. “We’re trying to get as much interest as possible.” |
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| El Sunday Times es un simple un periódico generalista del montón, propagandista de WALL STREET y la opinión de un no-especialista como Kathryn Cooper vale tanto como tu obsesión te dice que vale, Bobojista. Recomienda comprar acciones ![]() ![]() ![]() Haze caso y compra acciones como recomienda el periodicucho. Échale cojones al asunto (si los tuvieses) y pon tu dinero donde pones la bocaza. Deja ya de trollear sin pies ni cabeza. Gold at $53,000 an ounce? Gold at $14,172 an ounce? Morgan Stanley: Gold could top US$1,000 in three years Gold shines brighter on fresh demand - The Economic Times Right time now to invest in gold, say experts - The Economic Times Foreign banks cut down gold supply to India - The Economic Times Gold to outperform oil as recession brews - The Economic Times Iran converts some foreign reserves to gold Investors who fled to gold beat the crunch $3.5bn Saudi gold rush in two weeks Why China wants to beat America in Gold reserves Gold demand is still gaining steam abroad Última edición por PutinReloaded; 16-nov-2008 a las 00:57 |
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| Que basura de fuentes me traes. El de los 53,000 dolares la onza es ya delirante. |
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| Para basura el Sunday Times, nena, que es la versión USAca del 20minutos. Con tus fuentes visilleras te estás luciendo, trollaca de medio pelo. Mañana me citas el Hola y me tapas la boca, vale? |
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| Ahi, defendiendo el negocio. ![]() The Sunday Times, es la edición dominical del Times, el periodico mas prestigioso del Reino Unido. Las acciones (ahora que han caido) y la deuda pública son un excelente cobijo si se sabe elegir. (ppcc las recomienda). Los vínculos que plantas son una basura, la mitad son patrocinados por vendedores de oro, todos son hojas parroquiales de tercera. El de la onza a 53,000 dolares todavía esta babeando de solo pensarlo. El oro en deflación se comporta como una commodity mas, es decir para abajo que escarba. Sin patrón oro no vale mas que lo que la gente cree que vale y la caida del precio interanual atestigua que cada vez se cree menos en el oro. 430 euros la onza en 2009. |
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| Anda Trax deja de trolear, eres tan patetico en tu cruzada contra el oro como a la hora de buscar nazis donde no solo no los hay si no todo lo contrario cateto.
__________________ "Las ideologías son como supermercados modernos; de hecho venden un montón de nada pero a corto plazo dan al consumidor la sensación de tenerlo todo. El efecto en la gente es entonces parecido al producido por las drogas" LAIBACH-NSK STATE http://www.nskstate.com http://www.laibach.nsk.si http://wtc.laibach.org/ |
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| Hola Putin, regresas con otro nick. Lo de siempre, argumentos Ad hominem, no dices nada, insultos huecos. A mi me da igual el oro (tanto como a ti los pardillos a los que estafas). Tu cruzada pro-oro te ciega, se entiende, es tu negocio. Yo solo vengo a aclarar lo que enturbias, ni patrón oro, ni el dorado, ni nada, de nada. Sabes que no se puede ser troll orero y vendedor de oro, sabes que no tienes credibilidad. Pero para eso has sido creado, no eres mas que troll del nick del vendedor de oro del foro que dice ser tan serio y tan profesional, una manera fácil de no tener que comprometerse en discusiones que le harian perder credibilidad y poder llevar cualquier opinión argumentada contraría a la inversión en oro al absurdo. Sigamos hacia el absurdo con el "mixtificador" Putin: Eso a lo que llamas la versión USAca del 20 minutos es THE TIMES, el periodico de referencía del Reino Unido, si al menos dedicaras algo de tiempo a leer lo que criticas te enterarias que se habla en todo momento del Reino Unido y el Banco de Inglaterra. Aunque ya sabemos que tu estas para discutir hacia el absurdo, mientras tu otro nick hace el negocio. Vendedor "profesionah" cambia de troll, a Putin lo tienes quemado. Quédate con ese número 430 euros en 2009. |
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| Siendo yo poseedor de oro, estoy cercano a la postura de Trax. Y ni se me ocurre recomendar a nadie que compre oro o plata. Para mí es un seguro, llamadlo como querais, pero NO es dinero....el dinero son los papelitos, y el oro es oro. Sería dinero si pudieses comprar algo con oro, pero si quieres comprar, primero tienes que cambiar tu oro por papelitos. Ni mucho menos se va a volver al patrón oro. Tengo oro, porque no necesito más dinero en papelitos del que tengo, y como opción muy personal, ya que huyo de los bancos....... Pero no espero hacerme rico por tener oro, ni espero forrarme con un crack económico mundial....... lo tengo, y punto. Lo de compra, que va a ser un chollo.......pues no, la verdad. Y no lo tengo en casa, que también hay que ser friki, para tenerlo debajo del colchón...... Sigan ustedes, que está muy interesante. Salud
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