Liat Euro skr pasti Inggris ketawa2 doang ngeliatnya, gak salah klo gak mau
gabung ke Euro dulu jd duitnya gak keluar buat nalangin hahaha


On Fri, Nov 11, 2011 at 8:50 AM, <[email protected]> wrote:

> **
>
>
> ** Horeee.... Main yoyo nya bisa lebih lama.. :-)
>
> Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone from Sinyal Bagus XL, Nyambung
> Teruuusss...!
> ------------------------------
> *From: * [email protected]
> *Sender: * [email protected]
> *Date: *Fri, 11 Nov 2011 01:08:25 +0000
> *To: *Saham<[email protected]>
> *ReplyTo: * [email protected]
> *Subject: *Re: [saham] Progress in Italy, Greece on debt sends stocks up
>
>
>
> Sepertinya perancis giliran berikutnya ..
> ------------------------------
> *From: * ZFQ <[email protected]>
> *Sender: * [email protected]
> *Date: *Fri, 11 Nov 2011 08:03:47 +0700
> *To: *saham<[email protected]>; <[email protected]>
> *ReplyTo: * [email protected]
> *Subject: *[saham] Progress in Italy, Greece on debt sends stocks up
>
>
> http://finance.yahoo.com/news/progress-italy-greece-debt-sends-160240444.html
>
> Tinggal tunggu berita negatif berikutnya .. :)
> Progress in Italy, Greece on debt sends stocks upNEW YORK (AP) -- Signs
> of progress in Europe's debt crisis and an unexpected drop in unemployment
> claims pushed stocks higher Thursday, a day after the stock market took its
> worst fall since the summer.
>
> Greece named a new prime minister Thursday and Italy borrowed $6.8 billion
> at lower interest rates than analysts expected. Italy's benchmark rate
> dropped below 7 percent after spiking above that level Wednesday.
>
> Investors were also relieved by talk that the economist Mario Monti is
> likely to replace Premier Silvio Berlusconi, who was seen as an obstacle to
> meaningful economic reforms. Italy's president pledged that Berlusconi will
> step down soon.
>
> The Dow Jones industrial average rose 112.92 points, or 1 percent, to
> close at 11,893.86. It plunged 389 points Wednesday after Italy's borrowing
> rates soared and talks in Greece to name a new prime minister broke down.
> Traders have been concerned that debt troubles in Italy and Greece could
> create a liquidity crisis and lead to a global financial meltdown.
>
> The Labor Department reported early Thursday that the number of people
> applying for unemployment benefits fell to 390,000 last week. That figure
> and the four-week average were the lowest since April.
>
> Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Rockwell Global Capital, called
> the drop in unemployment claims and the news from Europe encouraging. "It's
> got the markets on the cheerful side," he said.
>
> The S&P 500 index gained 10.60, or 0.9 percent, to 1,239.70. The Nasdaq
> rose 3.50 points, or 0.1 percent, to 2,625.15. Apple Inc. fell 2.5 percent,
> dragging down the Nasdaq.
>
> Cardillo said he didn't believe that the worst predictions about Europe's
> debt crisis would come true. If things get bad enough, he said, the U.S.
> would have no choice but to come to the rescue.
>
> "If Italy was to fail, you can rest assured Europe would fail and the
> global economy would fail," he said. "The U.S. is in a global economy.
> Whatever happens in one part of the globe is no longer isolated."
>
> In Greece, a day after a breakdown in power-sharing talks jolted financial
> markets, senior banker Lucas Papademos was named prime minister of a new
> coalition government. Papademos, a former vice president at the European
> Central Bank, is tasked with passing austerity measures being demanded by
> international lenders.
>
> In corporate news:
>
> — Cisco Systems Inc. rose 5.7 percent after it reported quarterly results
> late Wednesday beat Wall Street's estimates.
>
> — Green Mountain Coffee Roasters Inc. plunged 39 percent after its
> revenues fell short of analyst expectations.
>
>
>
>    
>

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