Good things.So when the price of a dollar gos up what happens?
Yes.To put it in context, $18 billion was about 7% of the Feds total budget in 2012.... Do you think that this will be made back by reinvestment of monies saved at the pump?
Good things.So when the price of a dollar gos up what happens?
Yes.To put it in context, $18 billion was about 7% of the Feds total budget in 2012.... Do you think that this will be made back by reinvestment of monies saved at the pump?
And I think you've described the weapon unleashed by the USA and the Saudis against the Russians. But this is accellarating to stampede away from the dollar at a greater pace than the drop in the Russian economy. So it a very desperate move that will end in disaster. The pace and timing of that disaster in now out of western hands i think. The disaster was planned anyway, escape being the designers goal.
Yes.
The oil companies are not going away and their tax payments will not go to zero.Good luck on that
So tell us.Surely we can go $20/bbl lower as we must punish Russia. After all why should her economy be doing better than the rest of the EU and NA when she is the one under sanctions? Inquiring minds want to know.
Even that would be a raise from what they are paying now, they get a lot of coins from the public coffers that never make it anyplaca but into the shareholders pockets.. . . their tax payments will not go to zero.
The oil companies are not going away and their tax payments will not go to zero.
Even that would be a raise from what they are paying now, they get a lot of coins from the public coffers that never make it anyplaca but into the shareholders pockets.
If you guys haven't been hacked why do you not get links like this?
U.S. Government Telling Lies To Push The War Agenda - Episode 554 |
Activist Post: Russia's SWIFT Settlement Alternative
www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=aYX4WeqQfRo
Fell free to go and put a foil hat on him (or me)
You're daft. I can't think of a sector that pays more in tax than the oil patch. Maybe the banks pay more but I doubt it.Even that would be a raise from what they are paying now, they get a lot of coins from the public coffers that never make it anyplaca but into the shareholders pockets.
Depends on how accurate this bit is as being a summation of the issue. I see it as an Russian in-house credit card that is not Vis or Master-card yet can do international purchases in real-time. Then VISA can never be a lever in a dispute that may or may not have justification but it can certainly tell VISA what direction to take. Russia just closed the door for good, I'm assuming at this point that BRIC is also part of the overall deal as that is an alternative for Russia and China and most of South America for financial transactions that sees the US not make any money on the transactions through 'service fees'. There will still be service fees to pay to the World Banks as you can't do big projects without it fitting in with their desires. If most of the business doesn't involve the EU and NA then they are free to create business between themselves without facing sanctions. Do you see what I'm getting at here? The Royals had to make room for Business Men some 100's of years ago, that doesn't mean that step that was not willingly given up is the last one that would ever be taken in that direction. The US isn't the only sandbox on the globe, the only ones that are naive of that knowledge is NA.PS - on the SWIFT angle, while one group sends the transfer, another has to accept it.
See what I'm getting at here?
Link please. Do you see any glaring holes in this timeline for the US (and what they do we are sure to follow) Say from 1970 and up, the 'patch' always got lots of breaks on what would be their gross costs, it doesn't matter if it never made it onto a tax sheet ot it was a deduction if it did it was free money for them and it came out of public funds not connected to the tax at the pumps. There should be something that covers Canada as R&D was and is still a big expenditure that creates many spinoff companies, the service sector is pretty flat once the product is marketable.You're daft. I can't think of a sector that pays more in tax than the oil patch. Maybe the banks pay more but I doubt it.
Depends on how accurate this bit is as being a summation of the issue. I see it as an Russian in-house credit card that is not Vis or Master-card yet can do international purchases in real-time. Then VISA can never be a lever in a dispute that may or may not have justification but it can certainly tell VISA what direction to take. Russia just closed the door for good, I'm assuming at this point that BRIC is also part of the overall deal as that is an alternative for Russia and China and most of South America for financial transactions that sees the US not make any money on the transactions through 'service fees'. There will still be service fees to pay to the World Banks as you can't do big projects without it fitting in with their desires. If most of the business doesn't involve the EU and NA then they are free to create business between themselves without facing sanctions. Do you see what I'm getting at here? The Royals had to make room for Business Men some 100's of years ago, that doesn't mean that step that was not willingly given up is the last one that would ever be taken in that direction. The US isn't the only sandbox on the globe, the only ones that are naive of that knowledge is NA.
Canadian consumers are ending 2014 on a grumpy note
The Bloomberg Nanos Canadian Confidence Index fell to 55.1 in the final reading of the year. That’s the lowest since May 2013, as expectations for the economy tumble amid a plunge in the price of crude oil, the nation’s largest export, and with the currency at the weakest in more than five years. Views on housing have also dropped in the weekly sentiment gauge.
Why it’s time for investors to move out of Canada — and stay out
The recent weakness in both energy stocks and the broader market serves as yet another reminder that Canadians simply allocate too much of their attention and portfolios to domestic stocks. Keep reading.
“As we close out 2014, the forward view on the economy from a consumer standpoint is trending negatively,” said Nik Nanos, Ottawa-based chairman of Nanos Research Group. “Roll up a drop in the price of oil, a lower Canadian dollar and softening view on the value of real estate, and an environment is emerging which could lead to a tumultuous 2015.”
The 49 per cent drop since June in crude prices has prompted companies to scale back investment in a country sitting on the world’s third-largest pool of reserves, and governments to trim their outlook for revenue, providing another drag on an economy the Bank of Canada says is still two years away from a full recovery. The Canadian dollar is down 8.7 per cent this year versus the U.S. dollar amid the oil rout.
Canadian consumers are ending 2014 on a grumpy note | Financial Post
Some of that depends on perspective. I see a substantial drop in real estate as being good for the economy. Except for banksters that have made huge equity loans on over priced houses.
A low dollar is good for exporters but not so good for things we import. Could enhance manufacturing in Canada. Always be wary of what the vested interests are saying.