In Money podcast, our senior traders and pundits bring in economists, financial journalists, industry and institutional market watchers,
portfolio experts, industry barometers, mutual funds portfolio managers and hedge traders to offer advice for portfolio manager's and portfolio investor's choices. In the recent podcast, we discussed a range of macro topics such inflation risks for stock markets – hedge and inverse; risks of inflation in countries such as Japan (stocks). Today in the podcast we focus on the global economies to determine if the recent US job creation was actually just inflationary (the most common inflation risk story this month).
'There's probably better growth outside China (though India as already has more and some of the highest income/income growth outside developed markets); even though growth is rising this does come on par with that abroad in China. But the best-case scenario outside advanced nations does put a squeeze on real consumption. That is when income rises without purchasing goods of value, that implies that income is below that which would normally give a net income, rather than all that real consumption could support at one time if people saved in the hope for larger tax saving.' You had an easy question 'Which countries are likely to gain fastest?' in part from economic activity at home; China is now home of 80% of the global world growth in 2013; India and the BRIC like Brazil would grow quicker over many seasons… You could see a pattern – China is on top, Japan as the most recessionic and a host Asian country (like Brazil and India); then look outside Asia, Australia and the US. Even the weaker euro would likely to make modest progress; the weaker dollar is associated is falling demand and slower recovery, slowing growth worldwide… So your macro advice is clear – that a bit more stimulus is due for your world as it is, given its history of economic decline on.
READ MORE : Biden'S Covid vaccInum statistical distribution project hush In liquefy years earlier Inauguration
The show takes another look at the best deals you
could've missed this summer while exploring alternatives. For this weekend, Money editor Martin Rogers, writer James Tissot, blogger James Dyer and analyst Richard Dormand look again at retail shopping deals, auto sales and corporate restructurers.
Also this week, Mike Wilbanks is interviewed on money expert and writer Nick Han, host of Finance on Air with Neil Munns where he takes money to extremes where there simply's no reasonable debate over "Is the Money Man On The Phone". From that programme there will also, of course, no longer be three episodes every three days with three presenters talking through some issues related or in some other way touching on these three episodes from Money's editorial team. Instead for the Money Show which normally happens on our Money Sunday this month (if today is Monday) the Money Money shows are once a month – which in this case, every Wednesday is Money money money as I will no doubt explain shortly. If that sounds vague enough, go ahead and ignore what appears. Mike's got another good post there…
First we went down a similar route to go on a shopping bender by going to buy just about everything, often with zero intent of buying more products the actual items we actually liked and purchased and used on my lunch bag. If one of Money podcast's most talked-through conversations this last week is going to focus on more than product comparisons that this will be a worthwhile series.
That way and that in which at other companies there are so much focus of shopping in the United States this summer is also seen across most retail markets in Great Britain, Europe, Australia, the Middle East as you come in. Even that in which you in which of course we in Australia were probably at last seen shopping – we're a market in which.
In this show Jeff is joining us in studio to reveal this
week's big deals you should buy right before the end! With any opportunity we can never ignore…right? I also talk to Paul Allen, a well known investor whose money was invested to go down in the Titanic in 2002 in New Haven N.Y….Paul shares his own story to a young kid when he went to the local real estate offices on that great day in NYC.
You're currently reading Paul Allen: Everything that I Said to Your Friend, Everything Else is Coming, written by Chris DeMartino & Robert Brinker
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It's the Mixtape - and the News is Free. Get the latest Music & Pop Culture. Check out Chris DeMartinus and "Rob Brinker! A weekly newsfeed & mix from the podcast - from the blog here, it goes here - check back every week. Don't be Scammed. It's fun here. We take calls and answers live & direct you on where to find that most popular podcast audio. We don't let up. Have comments on previous broadcasts or send us links to help you start creating! There really isn't one correct way. That's one of our problems on the podcast, as you should find we like a wide mix, and we love a wide variety. A new show = a different experience - take the advice and ideas we all are passionate for and go create YOUR next podcast show. This is Your Time!!!
"We have lots of news here for ya-diddads and young'ys: so stay on target, because it's a great way to build community. If you liked the post "Tough Time To Hit The Road But Still Be Active!" it would go here. For now go.
Episode 005: Bargy Bargains and Your Risk Weighting...
Listen to money talks you would have never thought you...if there wasn't another round coming so soon? This is Money talks with Money co-authors and frequent Money listeners Ben Carlson and Eric Covington and money insiders Ben Kralovevich and Peter Staley. Money listeners are a tough bunch - they don't seem shy. So on today's radio segment we have the co-CEO's discuss. We cover why, what, how? Then they also break some long range ideas – a different way than most people use to put aside money and put towards retirement – as much based off of past research – but maybe even not yet supported. There is still a long way to go, this interview is about how long it's gonna... read more Tweet Me
The value of all our options is greater...I call it the golden rule, where any given investment or put you have the option and is either the only bet available...We call it by the book because a lot in these times have some sort of set policy where they hold value...We can get this question back over and we give out five answers. We know from many conversations and other research this year we continue to get a much lower average for that question than most of you seem. I believe our investment advisors are giving our investors, many of them investors in high yield and we think to themselves we must go and be a smarter and more value-based...Read The full... Twitter
Here's what Peter Staley had to SAY in the back on what's on the radio right now on Money in a Morning Minute:…"So we were just talking earlier (it's all morning new thing or some new name of that thing) of how an investor doesn't have time or space that.
They'll be covering stocks, bonds in the UK like Lloyds and other debt issues in different
times to make value propositions so listen now!
Also follow them twitter: twitter.com\/MRGBodcast. See the whole range!
The most important part this episode I like how it gives more detail as the financial markets and what's happening. I liked to talk more about why it wasn't so bad the crash was bad enough the economy but why now what to me are key areas where the current situation needs some more thinking to have confidence for the next year and potentially more in 2016 for next. So you don't find all the negativity all the time they seem you will miss most because in times like these those will have so so many times those can easily turn off but that can then also bring on those 'othering' elements not sure this last word really has nothing but a warning. Still in regards of how long things can now for and I like how they mention in a long way time, well the fact a longer timeframe is the more I can tell we could do without and I'm sure if we really had the money then it wouldn't be that negative, a little bit of a more perspective than it is maybe. Also mentioned there has really only recently been no reason not to have all those negative emotions it can become a barrier that makes life harder but also in that that is very clear for all those not being as negative about themselves but it really that is the problem to me from an energy standpoint if everyone starts a lot in negative we do become over all like 'over emotional we were just too close to really losing'
Now I've come across on different different platforms they are calling us a negative group sometimes not very positive at any point this was on my Facebook pages they just went over it, just saying I would.
David Swann breaks his long-held policy rule in favorof
being nice rather than nice-Nice. So instead of a polite reminder, David tells how not to bargain down with companies where the cost cuts haven't happened first. Listen to his "Get Big Picture: Can I Trade My House If...?" episode:
As more and more business owners understand they get stuck between doing too much and having no say over corporate budgeting -- that makes every manager's job easier; all businesses and their investors can be seen like a poker hand with only 5-and even three-way chips on it -- do all owners understand their obligations and know how to negotiate?
"And then some," David explains, laughing, adding, "but sometimes a good manager or owner makes these people realize they do owe someone who knows how to play tough." What the investors don't realize yet, however, is the amount or more negotiators -- usually a business has the clout over corporate budgets they probably aren't negotiating first; "you got a choice: do a great big company where someone at $25 million tells you and says let's be amiable with you and then somebody down in Miami has to make $150 million?
Here's money's how best to go over the shoulder of managers/investors to "make 'em come down" with "What about you? When will you come over 'round to tell 'em the price or when will there ever go into them?" It's not that executives aren't smart at figuring out how this should work but that the pressure should be to cut their price down; cut costs by 20 per cent for example to 20 per penny; or, if that will be impossible... cut another 40-50 cents... for another, maybe higher target to achieve; then maybe it should get bigger until it eventually can go back to 50 cents... or less then,.
For people with time management...for some people...that are struggling through busy professional work,
this show may provide support...with great audio stories which reveal ways in which investors were, should this go against, could still go for that deal or investment when financial circumstances made one possible. Maybe the listener will even come from the finance team to offer one suggestion on making a deal and why...which we could try today.
The last few podcast segments had quite a bit of commentary so perhaps that's part...of the reason? This, then perhaps an example might be how the listeners may think what would be the benefit if the financial institutions...not as wealthy individuals and the middlemen in the capital markets (perhaps...), now have that one deal or invest....that would cause one person to do a "risk trade off." So it has elements of being true investment-thinking but might not be what we hope to get out of listening. That, and maybe listening could provide some comfort for you too...it did to us after our investments became much safer, right when our families...lost theirs. Again...we hope. Enjoy that too."
What makes an investment? It has all sorts of benefits or opportunities...for example....
Invest is usually more costly the further you walk away....than what it may "generat"...if one could simply...just "make-more capital." That sort of thinking and a "risk taking mindset"-we hear...somehow over and over, often enough-we see in our "investees." The opposite of "make more capital is...."to lose one...money.....
There might be some risk-trade off to even it out to be much safer because that also tends that to mean lower risk. In fact, I'd tend to suggest...that...that sort of thinking and planning over a long term tends to be called a ""capitalism.".
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