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Tasty Pymp
PensionCraft
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Comments by "Tasty Pymp" (@tastypymp1287) on "PensionCraft" channel.
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1: Will there be a gov/fed intervention? 2: If so, will it work?
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@dubsdolby9437 What if I am?
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@dubsdolby9437 Luck? Luck is for gamblers.
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Explain here:
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Much like your understanding of grammar.
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I don't think Warren is saying he wants to pay more tax. I think he's diplomatically signalling that you can expect to pay more tax. This makes sense if you believe that the primary purpose of tax is not to provide an income to government but to withdraw money from circulation in order to help maintain inflation. The world is inverted. The governments income is printing money. Tax removes the excess.
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?
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@muffemod Valuation? Of what? Compared to who? I'm not taking a leap of faith on that.
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@muffemod Please be charitable. What was his valuation? Who were the experts? What were their valuations? Again, I'm not taking a leap of faith on that.
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Who's paying for that relief? Yet ANOTHER bail out??
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?
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Have US stock market performance and earnings been adjusted for inflation over the same period?
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Lucky buggers.... those were the days!
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Keep hoping.
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@johnristheanswer Yes, we should humour him.
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What made you think it was an English channel?
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@MAXERNEST What gives you the confidence to speak for the OP? What do you know? I didn't suggest he implied anything about ethnicity.
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@artkrueger8312 There is no population decline. The population numbers were fake to begin with.... it was only a matter of time before that became evident.
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?
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And inflation. You forgot inflation.
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@MartinJG100 While I agree in general, it's not quite as straight forward as that because of the creditors. They are savvy to this and demand compensation. If they don't receive, they stop buying government debt. This is already being observed with some major countries becoming net sellers of US treasuries. Imagine buying treasuries with a 0.25% yield. Who would buy them? Well, at the time the narrative was the world was about to collapse. It was about safety, the safest prospect of getting your capital back whole or at all. Other concerns like yield were dismissed. But then imagine then holding these bonds and the world didn't collapse. What's more, inflation jumps to circa 10% against your 0.25% yield. And the reason that inflation is so high is that the same country that sold you the debt is the same country that caused the inflation due to their irresponsible and irrational monetary and geopolitical policies. You'd probably want compensation. And thus you might be offered the opportunity to buy more debt, but at much more attractive yields....
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Rubbish.
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False. Nothing is overpriced. Learn economics.
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I don't get it.
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'Undervalued'....
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How will they stop it Rex? Sounds like hopium to me.
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Ramin, you need to check the inaccuracies of information you put out. I refer you to your weekly market roundup where you stated that the EU reached an agreement to set a temporary price cap on natural gas. They did no such thing. They agreed to the next stage of work to design what a price corridor might look like and how it will work. However, if any members disagree with the design then there will be no cap. Don't be a repeater. They are spinning propaganda. CNBC stated that the market seemed to have welcomed the move when prices DROPPED!!! We are not out of the woods yet on this.
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Looks fine to me.
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Let's talk about how HM Treasury authorised a £100bn extension to the BoE APF on 28 September and how that QE has been used as a short squeeze on the DAX40 and other indices?
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@ttrjw That hasn't answered the question.
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That's not guaranteed at all.
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@Jeffybonbon Cliché.
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Pretty hard to assert that as fact.
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Was that facility available then?
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Books will only tell you what they want you to know and think....
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@Ed Wyatt It's all misleading. Real returns are important, because essentially investors are looking to beat inflation and then the risk free rate (if it's higher than inflation). It doesn't matter about gold from 1970. Value is merely a comparison against other items of value. How gold performed against inflation and other asset classes from 1970 is the important metric.
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@annacomnena217 How are they a constant?
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Nope.
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What's the difference?
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That's very bugman thinking, always seeking a guru, always looking to be told what to do. Nothing more convenient than tyranny. Freedom is slavery afterall....
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Ramin is ex-industry. The industry always needs investors to keep investing, it's a business and it depends on consumers. So they will always tell you to keep on investing.
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False. The UK has NEVER defaulted.
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Learn what?
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So how will that contradiction be handled? Growth doesn't aid tackling inflation which is the top priority right now so it's likely the central banks will have to counter loose government fiscal policy with even tighter monetary policy. Because the government doesn't control money supply or the cost of money.
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Are you sure about energy being the big saviour of the US market Ramin? It's not the big cog in the US machine. Tech is the big money earner. You know that.
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@David Kelly Quantitative Easing. Not going to happen this time....
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@Mark Starr Nope. Investors won't have it. They demonstrated that when they effectively fired Truss and Kwartang by proxy. Lots of debt issued at ultra low yields. Now high inflation which is kryptonite to debt. That debt is now worth considerably less than before, and likely now at a loss. Creditors wants compensation. That means higher rates, for longer. People don't get it. They talk of the Fed pivot. It's already happened....
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High taxation compared to where?
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What great economy does that have?
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@toneloc-cz2xi Corporation tax UK = 19% Corporation tax US = 21%
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