Search Results | Showing 61 - 70 of 84 results for "Damn" |
| | | ... my scalp. And if not for its potential disastrous consequences on my superannuation, frankly, my dear, I wouldn't give a damn. There's a new twist in the tale of this ever so twisted Greek saga. In less than a week, financial markets were treated to ... |
| | | | ... ultimately, it'll get there. And once again, this will be remembered as another episode in financial market history as another 'damn, I should have gone shopping' moment. Johnny Nash's numero uno hit song of 1972 - deym, I'm old - came to mind as I was ... |
| | | | Now you can't say that you haven't been warned. As predicted, the hope trade went puff overnight. Wall Street and European equity markets ended lower last night as the rumours that littered the previous day's gossip mills proved to be lies - pure, simple ... |
| | | | Seen on Bloomberg this morning: "Greece Default Risk Jumps to 98%" (over the next five years). Duh! I don't know what financial markets have been smoking but as far I'm concerned Greek's been cactus ever since it's debt-to-GDP ratio hit 140% and real ... |
| | | | Let's talk about debt baby. D-E-B-T the four letters that's currently giving political leaders massive headaches, financial markets their jitters and gold its shine. With only two weeks to go before the debt ceiling blows up and bites their collective ... |
| | | | ... volatile situation in the country, Wall Street's performance overnight suggests that frankly, my dear, is doesn't give a damn (except of course, the Egyptians and oh, those nervously quivering autocrats in the region and elsewhere). Wall Street would ... |
| | | | Damned if they didn't, damned now that they did! Wall Street is behaving just like any four-year old these days. A four-year old who gets a present, he eagerly opens it, eyes beam, plays with it for about... maybe a week, then discards and wants something ... |
| | | | Lies, damned lies! This was China's response to a Financial Times report that its State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) met with foreign bankers to discuss reviewing its holdings of Eurozone bonds. SAFE manages Beijing's US$2.4 trillion worth ... |
| | | | ... really a move to appease the three or four hawks on the Fed." Technical manoeuvre? To appease three or four hawks at the Fed? Damn. I didn't think that the biggest, most powerful bank in the world could be that shallow! Especially when it concerns the ... |
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