Jangan kebanyakan nonton cnbc atau baca berita ekonomi dunia pak.., ntar stress 
sendiri.., hehe

Btw, secara VSA, DOW bakal gimana nih? Advise pls.

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-----Original Message-----
From: "adjies2000" <ad2...@cbn.net.id>

Date: Tue, 17 Mar 2009 13:13:40 
To: <obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com>
Subject: [obrolan-bandar] You'd be in some deep doo-doo, wouldn't you?



Alerts :
---Honeymood Long US banking-----dijagain....siap2 TP,,,,,OBAMa toxuc assets 
Plan....stimulus...budget ----->jadi omong kosong

===IHSG Player waras.....turun2 pelan2....jangan 'ikut2"an 
regional...........jangan Free fall...kasih waktu "cukup" untuk CutLoss pelan2.


Salam

=============================================================

China Sends Obama a Clear Message 
by Tony Sagami 
Dear Subscriber,

 
What would happen if your boss cut your salary, you had no savings, and none of 
the banks or credit card companies would lend you any money? You'd be in some 
deep doo-doo, wouldn't you?

Well ... that's exactly the situation the U.S. is potentially staring at if 
foreign governments decide they don't want to loan us any more money by buying 
U.S. Treasury and other government-backed bonds.

And who buys most of our bonds? China and Japan ...

At the end of 2008, China owned $727.4 billion worth of U.S. Treasury bonds. 
And Japan was second, at $626 billion.

Japan has drastically curtailed buying U.S. bonds now that its economy is in 
shambles. But China has been — and continues to be — the most important lender 
to the U.S., essentially funding a big chunk of President Obama's $787-billion 
economic stimulus plan.

The problem is ...

China is Re-Thinking the Wisdom 
Of Holding So Much U.S. Debt 

 
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao is worried about the stability of China's huge 
portfolio of U.S. government bonds. 
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao, speaking at the closing press conference of China's 
National People's Congress — China's annual legislative session — dropped this 
verbal bomb on the Obama administration last week:

"To be honest, I am definitely a little worried. We have loaned huge amounts of 
money to the United States, so of course, we have to be concerned. We hope the 
United States honors its word and ensures the safety of Chinese assets."

I highly doubt that those remarks were impromptu. They are a clear message to 
the Obama administration that it needs to stop spending like a drunken sailor 
if it expects the rest of the world to buy U.S. government bonds.

The line of Chinese policymakers, economists, and scholars voicing concerns 
about investing too much of their country's $2 trillion surplus in U.S. debt is 
growing longer and longer. Many are urging diversifying out of U.S. bonds and 
into more tangible assets such as natural resources and gold.

The reason is simple: 

There is an expectation that U.S. bonds are headed for a big drop in value 
because we are simply printing too much money to fund our stimulus spending 
spree.

In fact, the Chinese are already starting to move out of U.S. bonds ... 




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